A decade-old scam is back. PTCHits4u launched in 2011 as a straightforward Ponzi—you put in $1, you get $1.50 out. It collapsed in May. Now the operators are trying again with what they're calling a new compensation plan. The math tells you everything you need to know.

The scheme operates on micro commissions stretched across ten levels. Members pay $1 monthly to join a matrix cycler system. That dollar is commissionable, trickling down three levels of recruits: 10 cents to direct recruits, then 5 cents each to the next two tiers. It's the classic network marketing structure wrapped around something that generates no actual revenue.

There is no product. PTCHits4u offers advertising credits bundled with affiliate deposits, but these exist only to create the illusion of a business. Members click ads—10 per day gets you a new matrix position, or you can buy positions for 10 cents each.

Those positions feed through a ten-tier cycler. The starter level is a 1×2 matrix paying 4 cents. Levels two through five are also 1×2 matrices, paying 5, 6, 7, and 8 cents respectively. Then the matrix expands to 1×3 at level six, which jumps the commission to $1. Levels seven, eight, and nine pay $2, $3, and $4. Level ten—the final tier—pays $20.

On paper, $30.30 comes out for every 10 cents that goes in. But that's the fiction. The system requires 303 position purchases to complete a single ten-tier cycle. Once you factor in the referral commissions paid out when recruits cycle through—ranging from 1 cent at the starter level to $5 at level ten—and a $5 admin fee, the actual math becomes even worse for late arrivals.

This is how you stretch a micro Ponzi as thin as possible. Every commission is small enough to feel legitimate. The ten-tier structure creates the appearance of depth and legitimacy. The cycling mechanism is convoluted enough that most people won't stop to calculate that the only money flowing in comes from new recruits buying positions.

PTCHits4u didn't invent this model. It's the same recycled scheme that's crashed thousands of times. The operators simply rebranded it and relaunched, betting that people forget or don't care. The original version lasted a decade before it finally ran out of new money in May.

The scheme survives on one simple truth: someone always has to lose. The people who joined in 2011 and stuck around made money. The people who bought in during the last months watched their money evaporate. This version will follow the same trajectory. The operators know it. The people at the top know it. Everyone else will learn it the hard way.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is PTCHits4u and how does it operate?
PTCHits4u is a multi-level marketing scheme relaunched in 2011 as a Ponzi structure. Members pay $1 monthly to join a matrix cycler system where commissions cascade across ten tiers: 10 cents to direct recruits, 5 cents to subsequent levels. The scheme lacks genuine revenue sources, offering only advertising credits as façade legitimacy.

What are the primary characteristics identifying PTCHits4u as a Ponzi scheme?
The structure exhibits classic Ponzi indicators: unsustainable commission distributions, absence of legitimate product revenue, reliance on recruitment for income, and mathematical impossibility of profitability for most participants. Commissions are paid from new member deposits rather than actual business operations or product sales.

How does the compensation plan structure function across tier levels?
Members receive


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