Affiliate Disclosure
Last updated: February 2026
ReviewBridge.com is owned and operated by Aameya Digital Media. Here’s how we make money and what it does (and doesn’t) have to do with what we write.
How we earn revenue
When you click a link in one of our reviews and end up buying something, we may get a commission from the company. It doesn’t cost you anything extra. The price is the same whether you use our link or go to the vendor directly.
These commissions cover the cost of running the site. Without them, ReviewBridge wouldn’t exist.
Where affiliate links show up
Inside reviews, in comparison tables, and in recommendation sections. We sometimes use short links like reviewbridge.com/go/productname to manage them. Every page that contains affiliate links has a notice near the top saying so.
Does this affect what we write?
No.
Review scores come from our testing. Commission rates don’t factor into it. We’ve recommended products that pay us less over ones that would pay us more, because they were better. We’ve given poor scores to products we earn commissions on. And if a product is worth mentioning but doesn’t have an affiliate programme at all, we include it anyway.
The How We Review page explains our testing and scoring process.
Things we won’t do
Paid reviews. Nobody pays us to write a review or influence a score.
Sponsored content. We don’t publish it. If that ever changes, it’ll be clearly labelled.
Letting commercial relationships steer editorial decisions. Being an affiliate partner doesn’t buy a better review.
Why bother telling you all this
Because the whole thing falls apart if you don’t trust us. If we point you toward a product and it turns out to be rubbish, you stop coming back. We lose a reader and any commissions that might have come later. So our incentive is the same as yours: find the right product, not the one that pays the most.
Questions
Anything about our affiliate relationships or how the business works, email info@reviewbridge.com.
This disclosure is provided in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s guidelines on endorsements and testimonials (16 CFR Part 255) and applicable UK Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) regulations.
