Affiliate disclosure
DealRadar is funded through affiliate commissions and on-page advertising. We believe affiliate-funded editorial only works when the affiliate relationship is disclosed clearly, so here it is in plain language.
What "affiliate" means here
Many of the outbound links on this site — including the GET CODE buttons on individual deal pages — are affiliate links. When you click one and complete a qualifying purchase on the merchant's site, the merchant may pay DealRadar a referral commission. The price you pay is the same as it would be without the affiliate link, and the promotional code is the same publicly available code anyone can redeem. The only thing the affiliate link changes is who gets credit for the referral.
How this affects our editorial
The categories DealRadar covers are determined by buyer demand and editorial judgment, not by which affiliate programs pay the highest commission. We list deals from merchants we have no affiliate relationship with whenever the offer is genuinely useful to readers, and we have refused listings from merchants who would pay generously but whose products do not deserve a recommendation. Where two competing tools both have a public discount, we list both and let the reader choose.
FTC compliance
This disclosure is provided in compliance with the United States Federal Trade Commission's guidelines on endorsements and testimonials (16 CFR Part 255), and with similar transparency standards in the United Kingdom, the European Union, Canada, and Australia.
Advertising
In addition to affiliate revenue, some pages on DealRadar display advertising slots from third-party networks such as Google AdSense. These slots are clearly marked and are independent of our editorial recommendations.
Questions
If you have questions about how DealRadar is funded or how a specific listing came to be in the directory, please reach out via the contact page. We are happy to walk through any specific deal.