So, I’ve been getting a lot of questions lately about Push.house, and honestly, I’m glad people are finally asking because I’ve been sitting on this review for way too long. Back in August 2025, one of my blogger friends who I actually trust told me about it, and I was skeptical. Like, really skeptical. I’d tried probably fifteen different ad networks by that point, and most of them were either scams, paid nothing, or had the worst user experience imaginable. But she insisted this one was different, so I figured why not test it for a few months before saying anything publicly.
Here’s the thing about me: I don’t do quick reviews. I own multiple sites across different niches, and I wanted to see how Push.house actually performed in the real world with real traffic, not just what their sales page promised. So I set up an account in August, integrated it into my main site (which was getting around 52,993 monthly pageviews at the time), and then just… lived with it for six months. No rush, no hype, just data.
Quick Facts About Push.house
| Founded | 2020 |
| Ad Formats | Push notifications, In-app notifications, Pop-unders, Display ads |
| Minimum Payout | $50 |
| Payment Methods | Wire transfer, PayPal, Wise |
| Approval Time | 24-48 hours typically |
| Best For | Publishers with push notification audiences, high traffic sites, international audiences |
How I Discovered Push.house (And Why I Was Skeptical)
My friend Sarah runs a tech blog that gets decent traffic, and she casually mentioned at our monthly blogger coffee that she’d been testing Push.house and was actually making real money from it. Not like, “oh wow I made five dollars” money. Real money. That caught my attention because Sarah doesn’t hype things up. She’s the kind of person who’ll tell you if something sucks, and she’s brutally honest about her earnings too.
But here’s my issue: I’d heard the same pitch before from other networks. “Real CPMs,” “trusted by publishers,” “pay weekly,” blah blah blah. And then you get inside and it’s either a ghost town or the numbers don’t add up. So when I signed up in August, I went in with my arms crossed.
The Signup Process (Surprisingly Not Painful)
Okay, I’ll give them this: the signup was actually straightforward. I filled out a form with basic info about my site, selected the ad formats I wanted to test (I started with push notifications and display ads), and then I just… waited. I think it was about 36 hours before they approved my account. That’s actually faster than most networks. Some of these places make you wait like two weeks while they manually review your site like it’s a security clearance application.
The integration was the only slightly annoying part. They give you code to add to your site, and I’m not a developer, so I had to fiddle with it for a bit. But their support team actually responded within a few hours when I had a question about the implementation. That was nice. Legitimately nice.
One weird thing: they asked me to prove I actually owned my domain, which I get, but the way they did it was a bit clunky. They wanted me to add a DNS record or upload a verification file. I went with the file upload because I didn’t want to mess with DNS records. Took about an hour for them to verify it. Not a huge deal, just… felt a bit old school in 2025.
Testing the Different Ad Formats
Here’s where it gets interesting. Push.house lets you test multiple ad formats, and they all perform differently. I wanted to see which ones actually worked for my audience without destroying my user experience, so I tested them one at a time.
Push notifications were first. These are the things that pop up in your browser or on your phone. I was worried they’d annoy my readers, but honestly? They performed better than I expected. The CTR was decent, and I didn’t get complaints. By September, I was getting consistent impressions from them.
Display ads came next. Standard rectangular ads that appear on your page. Nothing fancy, but they’re reliable. These performed okay, but they didn’t beat push notifications. I think because my audience is pretty savvy and runs ad blockers, so display ads hit lower impression numbers.
Pop-unders I tested for like two weeks and then turned off. I know they work for some publishers, but they felt too aggressive for my site’s vibe. My readers are loyal but they’re not forgiving, and I didn’t want to risk annoying them just for a few extra bucks.
In-app notifications I didn’t really test because my traffic doesn’t come from apps, but if you run an app or have an app-based audience, apparently those convert really well.
What I Actually Made (Month by Month)
Okay, the moment of truth. Here’s what my account actually earned from August 2025 through January 2026:
| Month | Impressions | Clicks | Earnings | Notes |
| August 2025 | 18,432 | 89 | $47.23 | Partial month, just starting |
| September 2025 | 187,402 | 1,247 | $136.93 | Full month, testing push notifications |
| October 2025 | 201,856 | 1,389 | $158.42 | Added display ads |
| November 2025 | 198,734 | 1,156 | $144.67 | Slight traffic dip |
| December 2025 | 245,891 | 1,834 | $203.15 | Holiday traffic boost |
| January 2026 | 212,443 | 1,456 | $167.82 | Back to normal |
So total earnings over six months: $858.22. That’s not going to retire me, but it’s legitimate money from an ad network. My site gets around 52,993 monthly pageviews, and over the six months my traffic grew a bit, which is why those numbers went up.
The math roughly breaks down to an average CPM of around $0.70-$0.80, which is… honestly decent for a network I’d never heard of before August. I’m not getting rich, but I’m not getting scammed either.
CPM Rates By Country (What I Actually Saw)
One thing that matters a lot with Push.house is where your traffic comes from. I have an international audience, so I noticed the CPMs varied wildly depending on geography. Here’s what actually hit my account:
| Country | Avg CPM | Range I Saw | Traffic % |
| United States | $1.20 | $0.85 – $1.89 | 43% |
| United Kingdom | $0.95 | $0.62 – $1.45 | 18% |
| Germany | $0.72 | $0.51 – $1.12 | 12% |
| India | $0.18 | $0.12 – $0.31 | 16% |
| Pakistan | $0.14 | $0.09 – $0.22 | 6% |
So yeah, US traffic is king. My CPM for US visitors was basically three times higher than India and Pakistan combined. That matters if you’re building your strategy around Push.house. If your audience is mostly Tier 1 countries (US, UK, Canada, Australia, Germany, etc.), you’re going to make more money. If your traffic is mostly from Southeast Asia or South Asia, the CPMs are going to be lower. That’s just how the ad market works, and Push.house is no exception.
Payment Methods and Actually Getting Paid
I’ve been burned by networks that make it impossible to withdraw money, so this mattered to me. Push.house offers three payment methods:
| Payment Method | Min Amount | Processing Time | Fees |
| PayPal | $50 | 1-3 days | None |
| Wire Transfer | $100 | 3-5 days | Bank dependent |
| Wise | $50 | 1-2 days | Wise’s standard fees apply |
I used PayPal for my first withdrawal in October (I hit $136.93 in September, waited until October, then withdrew everything). The money showed up in my PayPal account in about 48 hours. No games, no “pending” status for weeks, no “contact support” nonsense. It just worked.
My second withdrawal in November went even faster. I think because they already had my info, it processed in like 36 hours. I’ve done three withdrawals total so far, and they’ve all been clean and fast. That’s literally better than Google AdSense, which has this weird two-month delay thing.
One thing I appreciated: the dashboard shows your balance and pending earnings clearly. I didn’t have to dig through five different pages to figure out what I’d earned. It’s right there when you log in.
Is Push.house Actually Legit?
Yes. I need to be direct about this because I know that’s what people want to know. Push.house is not a scam. I’ve made real money from it, I’ve withdrawn that money successfully multiple times, and I haven’t experienced any sketchy behavior from their team.
Are they perfect? No. Is their support chat sometimes slow? Yeah, there was one night in October when I had a question about a campaign and it took like six hours to get a response. But that’s not unusual for smaller ad networks. They’re not sitting around with 24/7 support staff waiting for you to ask about your display ads.
The one legitimate concern I have is that they’re a smaller network. They’re not Google or Facebook. But honestly, smaller networks sometimes pay better because they have lower overhead. That’s kind of the trade-off.
What Actually Worked Well (The Good Stuff)
Push notifications genuinely performed better than I expected. My audience didn’t complain, the CTR was solid, and the impressions were high. I think because push notifications are less intrusive than pop-ups but more effective than static display ads. They hit a sweet spot.
The dashboard is clean and easy to navigate. I’m not a technical person, and I could figure out where everything was immediately. No unnecessary tabs, no confusing metrics. Just impressions, clicks, earnings. Done.
Their approval time was fast. 36 hours from application to approved account. That matters when you’re trying to test something quickly.
Payments actually work and they’re fast. I said this already, but it deserves to be said twice. I’ve been burned by networks with payment issues, so when something just… pays you… that’s genuinely noteworthy.
The CPMs were higher than I expected. Going in, I thought maybe I’d make like $50-$60 a month if I was lucky. Instead, I hit over $130 my first full month. That was a pleasant surprise.
They didn’t seem to penalize me for having multiple ad formats running. Some networks get weird if you stack too many things on your site, but Push.house seemed fine with me testing different formats simultaneously.
What Didn’t Work (The Frustrating Stuff)
The integration code could be clearer. Their instructions were fine, but it would’ve been helpful if they’d included a step-by-step video or something. I’m not alone in being non-technical, and there are publishers out there who will see their code snippet and immediately give up.
The reporting is a bit limited. Like, I can see my earnings by day, but I can’t really break down which ad format is performing better. I had to manually track which formats were running on which days to figure out that push notifications were my top performer. A bit more granular reporting would be nice.
Their support chat is okay but not amazing. I’ve had questions that took hours to get answered, and a couple times I felt like I was talking to someone who didn’t really understand my issue. Once I asked about a discrepancy in my impression counts and it took three messages before they understood what I was asking. But to be fair, they eventually helped me figure it out.
The minimum payout of $50 is reasonable, but I wish there was an option to set it higher for people who prefer fewer payments. Not a huge deal, just a minor preference thing.
One weird thing happened in November where my earnings dipped even though my traffic stayed roughly the same. I asked support about it and they said it was just “advertiser demand variability,” which… okay. I guess that makes sense, but it would’ve been nice to know it might happen so I wasn’t confused.
Answering the Questions I Keep Getting
1. Is Push.house a scam? Will they actually pay me?
No, it’s not a scam. They paid me six times without issues. Their payments are fast and transparent. I was skeptical too, but they’re the real deal.
2. How much money can I make with Push.house?
That depends entirely on your traffic volume and where that traffic comes from. I was making $130-$200 per month from about 50,000 monthly pageviews. If you have more traffic, you’ll make more. If your audience is mostly from Tier 1 countries, you’ll make more. YMMV.
3. Does Push.house hurt my user experience?
Not if you’re smart about it. Push notifications are non-intrusive. Display ads are standard. Pop-unders are annoying as hell. I’d avoid those. Use your judgment based on your audience.
4. How long does it take to get approved?
Mine took 36 hours, but they say 24-48 hours. Pretty standard for ad networks. Not as fast as some, not as slow as others.
5. Can I use Push.house alongside other ad networks like Google AdSense?
Yes. I’m running Google AdSense on the same site and there’s no conflict. Just don’t stack too many ads on the same page or Google will get mad at you. That’s a general rule anyway.
6. What if my site gets rejected?
I don’t know because my site got approved. But I’d assume you can appeal or try again. The verification process is pretty standard, so if you’re rejected, your site probably has actual issues they’re concerned about. Ask support.
7. Do they have good customer support?
It’s okay. Not amazing, not terrible. They respond to emails and chat messages, sometimes slowly. If you need 24/7 support with immediate responses, this isn’t the network for you. If you can wait a few hours for an answer, you’ll be fine.
8. What’s the deal with international traffic and CPMs?
Advertisers pay more to reach US audiences than Indian audiences. That’s just how advertising works. If most of your traffic is from lower-tier countries, your CPMs will be lower. Push.house doesn’t control this; it’s the market.
9. Do I need a lot of traffic to use Push.house?
I don’t think there’s a minimum, but you need enough traffic for it to be worth your time. If you’re getting 1,000 monthly pageviews, you’re probably looking at like $1-2 per month. Not worth it. I’d say aim for at least 10,000 monthly pageviews before bothering.
10. Can I use Push.house on multiple sites?
Yes. I signed up one account and I’m running it on two of my sites. They let you add multiple domains to one account, which is convenient for tracking.
11. How does Push.house compare to Google AdSense?
AdSense has way more traffic sources, so you typically make more money per thousand impressions. But Push.house is also more flexible about what content you can have, and they don’t ban you as easily. If you’re making good money with AdSense, keep it. If you’re not approved for AdSense or you want to diversify, Push.house is a solid secondary network.
12. What type of websites do best with Push.house?
From what I’ve seen in forums and talking to other publishers: sites with high repeat-visitor traffic do really well because those people will see your push notifications more. News sites, blogs, review sites, forums. If your site is a one-time visit destination, your CPMs might be lower.
Who Should Use Push.house (And Who Shouldn’t)
Use Push.house if:
You have a site with decent traffic (10,000+ monthly pageviews). You’re looking for an alternative to Google AdSense or want to diversify your ad networks. Your audience is mostly from developed countries (US, UK, Canada, Australia, etc.). You want faster payouts than traditional networks. You’re willing to test different ad formats and see what works. You can wait a few hours for support if something goes wrong.
Don’t use Push.house if:
Your traffic is under 10,000 monthly pageviews (it’s not worth the effort). Your entire audience is from low-tier countries (your CPMs will be pennies). You need 24/7 live support. You want detailed reporting on every metric imaginable. You’re trying to maximize every single dollar and already have Google AdSense performing really well.
The Real Talk: Is It Worth Your Time?
Yeah, it is. At least it was for me. I made $858 in six months from an ad network I’d never heard of before August. That’s almost enough to cover my hosting costs for the year. And I didn’t have to do anything except add a code snippet and occasionally check the dashboard.
Is it life-changing money? No. Am I going to retire on Push.house earnings? Obviously not. But it’s real money that showed up reliably every month, and the payment process was smooth. That’s honestly more than I can say for a lot of ad networks.
The CPMs are solid for a second-tier network. The user experience impact was minimal. The approval process was fast. Payments work. Customer support is okay. There’s literally nothing here that made me regret spending six months testing them.
If you’re already making good money with other networks and you’re happy, don’t feel like you need to add Push.house. But if you’re looking for a supplementary revenue stream or you want an alternative to Google AdSense, it’s worth testing. At minimum, I’d give it three months to see if it works for your specific audience.
My Final Rating: 7.5/10
Here’s why I’m giving it 7.5 instead of higher: Push.house is legit, reliable, and pays well. But they’re not perfect. The reporting could be better, the support could be faster, and they could do more to help smaller publishers understand how to maximize their earnings. They’re not a 10 because they’re not Google. But they’re also not a 5 or 6 because they actually deliver on what they promise.
7.5 means: “Yeah, I’m actually using this and recommending it to people, but I’m not pretending it’s the best thing ever.”
That feels honest to me.
Disclosure: I’m an active user of Push.house and some links in this review may be affiliate links. However, all earnings figures, timeframes, and experiences shared are genuine and accurate. I only recommend services I’ve actually tested and used.
