Affiliate Disclosure
Effective March 28, 2026
How Affiliate Links Work
StackTested may use affiliate links on some pages. If a reader clicks one of those links and later makes a purchase, StackTested may receive compensation from the merchant or affiliate network. The reader usually pays the same price either way.
What Does Not Change
Affiliate availability does not decide the editorial verdict by itself. StackTested uses the same framework whether a merchant has a live partnership or not: label transparency, effective dosing, testing signals, practical use, and value per serving. A higher payout does not automatically move a product or merchant into a stronger recommendation slot.
How Disclosures Appear on the Site
Pages that are commercial in intent, such as buying guides, retailer comparisons, and “best of” roundups, use a visible disclosure near the top of the page in addition to this standalone policy. That approach is designed to make the commercial relationship clear before a reader clicks outbound links.
Programs and Networks
StackTested may work directly with merchants or through affiliate platforms such as Awin, Dognet, CJ, Partnerize, or Impact. Program terms, cookie windows, and approval policies can change over time, so merchant-specific details are reviewed again when links go live.
Medical and Safety Context
Supplement content on StackTested is informational only. The site does not position supplements as cures, and readers should not treat affiliate-linked content as a substitute for professional medical guidance.