There is no information on the Burj Rewards website indicating who owns or runs the business.

The Burj Rewards website domain (“burjrewards.com”) was registered on March 9th 2015, however the domain registration is set to private.

As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money.

The Burj Rewards Product Line

Burj Rewards has no retailable products or services, with Burj Rewards affiliates only able to market Burj Rewards affiliate membership itself.

Once signed up, Burj Rewards affiliates can invest in “VIP points”. Bundled with each VIP point investment are a series of advertising credits, which can be used to display advertising on the Burj Rewards website.

The Burj Rewards Compensation Plan

The Burj Rewards compensation plan sees affiliates invest in VIP points.

free membership – 100 VIP points that disappear after 60 days if an affiliate does not pay for a subscription

Silver – ($10 a month) – 110 VIP points

Gold ($50 a month) – 150 VIP points

Diamond ($100 a month) – 200 VIP points

Each Burj Rewards affiliate is assigned three daily tasks, the completion of which sees them earn a daily ROI on their VIP point balance.

VIP points expire after 90 days, with affiliates required to replenish their point balance through continued investment. Additional VIP points cost $1 per point.

Recruitment Commissions

Burj Rewards affiliates are paid to recruit new affiliates.

How much of a recruitment commission is paid out is determined by how much a newly recruited Burj Rewards affiliate spends on their membership:

recruit a Silver affiliate = $2

recruit a Gold affiliate = $10

recruit a Diamond affiliate = $20

Residual Recruitment Commissions

Residual recruitment commissions in Burj Rewards are paid out via a twenty-one level deep matrix. Note that Burj Rewards 
do not
disclose the width of the matrix.

Matrix commissions are tied to monthly PV generation, with commissions paid out down a maximum twenty-one levels as follows:

Distributor (30 PV) – 25 cents a recruited affiliate paid out down five matrix levels

Manager (50 PV) – 25 cents for a Silver affiliate and $1 for a Gold or Diamond affiliate paid out down ten matrix levels

Executive (100 PV) – 35 cents for a Silver affiliate, $1.50 for a Gold affiliate and $3.50 for a Diamond affiliate, paid out down fifteen matrix levels

Senior Executive (700 PV) – 25 cents for a Silver affiliate, $1 for a Gold affiliate and $2 for a Diamond affiliate, paid out down twenty-one matrix levels

PV stands for “Product Volume” and is sales volume generated by a Burj Rewards affiliate’s investment, payment of monthly subscription fees and recruitment of affiliates:

VIP point investment = 1 PV per $1 invested

Silver subscription = 10 PV a month

Gold subscription = 50 PV a month

Diamond subscription = 100 PV a month

Joining Burj Rewards

Affiliate membership with Burj Rewards is either free or via a paid monthly subscription.

Free membership = no cost

Silver = $10 a month

Gold = $50 a month

Diamond = $100 a month

Note that Free affiliates are required to sign up for a paid subscription after 60 days.

Conclusion

My guess is that the admin(s) of Burj Rewards were affiliates in the
Zeek Rewards Ponzi scheme
.

Zeek Rewards terms such as “retail profit pool” and “VIP points” have been recycled in Burj Rewards – with even the name of the company slightly different.

There’s talk about giving points away on the Burj Rewards website, but with nothing offered to retail customers (Zeek had affiliates give away purchased bids to fake customers), it seems to be an oversight (as far as I can tell Burj Rewards affiliates don’t have anything to give away).

Pretty much Burj Rewards is Zeek Rewards, with the penny auction ruse stripped away. In its place is your standard ad-credit offering, borrowed from AdSurfDaily.

Zeek Rewards pioneered the 90 day Ponzi points model, AdSurfDaily before it the ad-credit Ponzi scheme.

The
SEC breakdown of Zeek Rewards
reveals precisely why it was a Ponzi scheme.

In a nutshell, newly invested funds are used to pay off existing investors. The daily ROIs paid out are made up, with the scheme collapsing once newly invested funds are exhausted.

In the Ponzi points model, this occurs when early investor VIP point balances are compounded. The balances grow exponentially until the daily amount withdrawable outstrips new investment.

The monthly fees and matrix commissions add an additional recruitment-based pyramid layer to the scheme.

Zeek Rewards was on the verge of collapse when the SEC stepped in to shut it down. The majority of investors lost money in the scheme, with Burj Rewards guaranteed to follow in the same footsteps.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Burj Rewards and its business model?
Burj Rewards is an MLM scheme launched in 2015 that operates without transparent ownership disclosure. The company offers no retail products, instead requiring affiliates to purchase "VIP points" bundled with advertising credits usable on their website. Revenue generation derives solely from affiliate recruitment and point investments.

Why is Burj Rewards considered a Ponzi scheme?
Burj Rewards lacks legitimate retail products and sustainable revenue sources. Affiliates generate income exclusively through recruiting others and investing in VIP points rather than selling tangible goods. This structure mirrors the Zeek Rewards model, a documented Ponzi operation shut down by authorities.

What are the risks associated with Burj Rewards membership?
The company maintains private domain registration and undisclosed ownership, preventing verification of operational legitimacy. Affiliates face financial risk through VIP point


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