About DealRadar
DealRadar started as an internal spreadsheet. Our team — three of us at the time, running marketing for a small B2B SaaS company — were renewing roughly thirty software contracts a year and getting tired of pasting expired promo codes into checkout flows. We started keeping a shared list of working discount codes, organized by category, with notes on which offers actually applied at the line-item level. Within a few months, that spreadsheet was the most-opened tab in our browsers, and friends from other startups kept asking for access.
This site is the natural next step. DealRadar exists because the B2B software market is enormous, the renewal cycle is constant, and the public discount landscape is a mess. Vendors run growth promotions on every channel they can find — partner programs, end-of-quarter campaigns, dead affiliate blogs that ranked for the keyword once and never updated again — and the average buyer has no efficient way to know whether a tool they are about to renew has a public discount sitting one search away. We aggregate the verifiable ones in one place, write up an honest summary of what each offer actually saves you, and link straight to the merchant.
What we cover
We focus on the categories where teams burn the most budget: email marketing platforms, customer relationship management software, search engine optimization suites, social media schedulers, helpdesk and live-chat tools, sales engagement and prospecting platforms, AI writing assistants, ecommerce backends, web hosting, design tools, and the rest of the operational toolkit a modern company runs on. We do not chase consumer deals — there are plenty of sites for those — and we do not list anything we cannot verify against a real, public source.
Editorial standards
Every listing on DealRadar is paired with a written breakdown that includes the promotional code, the merchant, the discount type and value, an expiration window, and the redemption steps. We do not auto-publish anything from raw affiliate feeds without an editor's pass. When a code stops working, we mark it as expired and look for a replacement rather than leaving a dead listing in the directory.
How DealRadar makes money
We are funded through affiliate commissions and on-page advertising. When you click a GET CODE button and complete a purchase on a partner merchant, the merchant may pay DealRadar a referral fee at no extra cost to you. The price you pay is the same — and the discount you redeem is real. We never recommend a tool we would not recommend without a commission, and the categories we cover are determined by buyer demand, not by which programs pay the highest payout. See our affiliate disclosure for more.
Get in touch
If you spot a code that has expired, want to suggest a tool we should add, or run growth or partnerships at a B2B SaaS company and want to discuss a feature, the fastest path is the contact page.