Affiliate disclosure.
PeptideRadar participates in affiliate programs with peptide research-chemical vendors. This page explains exactly how we make money, which programs we're in, and how we handle conflicts between affiliate revenue and editorial independence.
How we make money
PeptideRadar earns a commission when a reader clicks through one of our links to a participating vendor and completes a purchase. The commission is paid by the vendor out of their margin; our readers pay the same price either way. Some affiliate programs offer a one-time commission; others offer a lifetime or recurring commission on subscriptions.
Programs we participate in
- Apollo Peptide Sciences — affiliate partner.
- Ascension Peptides — affiliate partner.
- Other vendors we review and link to are not always affiliate partners. We disclose affiliate vs non-affiliate status on each review page.
Editorial independence
We publish critical reviews of affiliate-partner vendors when the data warrants it. An affiliate relationship does not buy favorable coverage. If a vendor we're affiliated with ships us a bad lot, fails a COA test, or has a major quality incident, we publish the finding — and we flag the affiliate relationship in the article so readers can calibrate.
What you'll see on articles
- Every page carries an FTC affiliate-disclosure banner at the top.
- Every article that contains an affiliate link discloses this inline.
- Reviews explicitly state whether the reviewed vendor is an affiliate partner.
- We do not run sponsored posts, sponsored reviews, or "gift bag" coverage.
Questions
If you see something that looks like an undisclosed commercial relationship on PeptideRadar, email corrections@peptideradar.net. We take this seriously.