Plain-English summary: Some articles on True Health Fox contain affiliate links. If you buy a product through one of those links, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Our editorial recommendations are based on research and editorial criteria ? not on which brand pays the highest commission.
This page explains how affiliate relationships work on True Health Fox, what they do and don?t influence, how we identify affiliate links on the site, and what you can do if you have questions.
What an affiliate link is
An affiliate link is a tracked URL to a third-party retailer or product page. When a reader clicks the link and later makes a qualifying purchase, the retailer pays True Health Fox a commission. The price you pay is the same whether you use the link or not.
True Health Fox participates in third-party affiliate programs that include ? but are not limited to ? major retailers and supplement-specific networks such as ClickBank. We disclose specific brand or program relationships within an article when they are material to the recommendation.
How we identify affiliate links
- Articles that contain affiliate links automatically show a disclosure banner at the top of the page.
- Affiliate call-to-action buttons are styled distinctly from internal navigation links.
- Outbound affiliate links carry the
rel="sponsored nofollow"attribute, in line with Google?s guidance for monetized links.
If you ever see a recommendation that looks promotional but isn?t labeled, please email us at editorial@truehealthfox.com so we can fix the markup.
How affiliate relationships are kept separate from editorial
- Editorial chooses what we cover. Topic selection is driven by reader questions and search intent, not by available affiliate programs.
- Reviewers are independent. Writers and clinical reviewers are not paid by the brands they cover, and reviewer assignments avoid known financial conflicts.
- Ratings reflect evidence, not commissions. Where two products serve the same goal, we rank them by ingredient quality, dose adequacy, third-party testing, return policy, and safety ? never by which one pays more.
- We will publish a critical review of an affiliate product when the evidence calls for it, including a “skip this” recommendation when warranted.
What we will not do
- Recommend products with no credible mechanism, no human evidence, or known safety problems, regardless of commission.
- Use “miracle cure”, “guaranteed results”, “instant results”, or “doctors hate this” framings to drive clicks.
- Hide negative information about a product we earn from.
- Place affiliate links inside content where they could be mistaken for editorial citations.
FTC and consumer-protection alignment
This site?s disclosure approach is designed to comply with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission?s endorsement and “made for advertising” guidance, as well as comparable consumer-protection rules in the UK, EU, Canada, and Australia. The summary disclosure appears before any affiliate recommendation in an article ? never buried in a footer.
Health context, always
Affiliate revenue does not change the health caveats in our articles. Supplement reviews include who should avoid the product, common interactions, and red-flag symptoms that warrant professional evaluation. Affiliate recommendations sit after the educational content, not before it. See our Editorial Policy and Medical Review Policy for the full review pipeline.
Questions or concerns
Questions about a specific affiliate relationship, a missing disclosure, or a recommendation that looks biased: editorial@truehealthfox.com. We answer every legitimate concern.