Bank·Offers
Disclosure: Some links on this site are affiliate links that may earn us a commission at no cost to you. Editorial decisions are made independently of advertiser relationships — see our advertising policy. Offer terms change frequently; verify with the issuing institution before applying.
Disclosures

Advertising & affiliate disclosures

How Bank Offers makes money, the structure of our affiliate relationships, and the firewall between editorial and advertising.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-17 Type: Disclosure

Affiliate disclosure (FTC-compliant)

Some links on this site are affiliate links. If you click an affiliate link and open an account or transact with the linked institution, we may receive a commission at no additional cost to you. Affiliate-link relationships exist with a range of US banking and brokerage partners and may change over time.

Every affiliate link on this site is marked with rel="sponsored nofollow" in the HTML, consistent with FTC guidance on disclosing affiliate relationships. The disclosure strip at the top of every page provides standing notice of the affiliate-link economics. This page provides the full policy.

Categories of affiliate relationships

We work with affiliate networks and direct partner programs across the following categories:

We don't list specific partner institutions here because the partner roster changes. Any specific institution that pays us a commission for a reader-initiated account opening has an affiliate link marked accordingly on the page where it appears. Institutions we cover that don't have an affiliate program are linked with standard non-sponsored links.

Editorial firewall

Editorial coverage and the affiliate program are independent. Specifically:

Editorial decisions, including which offers to feature and how to characterize them, are made by the editorial team independently of the advertising relationship.

Plain-language summary

When we say "we may earn a commission" — what does that actually mean?

The reader pays nothing additional for clicking through an affiliate link. The bank uses affiliate commissions as one channel of marketing spend; our payment is the bank's customer acquisition cost for the readers we send.

How to identify disclosed vs non-disclosed links

Disclosed (sponsored) links are tagged with rel="sponsored nofollow" in the HTML. Most browsers don't display this attribute visually; the disclosure mechanism is the policy stated here plus the standing disclosure strip at the top of every page. Some browser extensions can highlight sponsored links if you want a visual indicator while browsing.

Non-disclosed links to bank or institution pages — for example, links to an FDIC.gov educational resource, an NCUA member-lookup tool, an IRS form, or a bank's official terms page that we're citing for verification rather than referring readers to — are standard href links without the sponsored attribute. These are editorial references, not revenue-generating links.

Reader privacy

When you click through an affiliate link, the affiliate network or partner program receives information about the referral (typically: the source publisher, the click time, sometimes a referral cookie that persists for a short window). What information the destination institution collects when you arrive on their site is governed by their privacy policy, not ours.

This site itself does not require an account, does not collect logins, and does not host comments. Site analytics, if running, are limited to aggregate visit information and not tied to individual reader profiles. Where we use third-party services (hosting, analytics, email for the contact inbox), those services have their own privacy policies that apply to the data they handle.

We don't sell, share, or rent reader contact information. The contact addresses listed on the contact page route to our editorial inbox; correspondence there is treated as confidential and not used for marketing.

Contacting us about advertising

Inquiries about advertising opportunities, affiliate partnerships, or sponsored placements should go to the advertising address listed on the contact page — not the editorial inbox. This separation is intentional: editorial and advertising are kept operationally distinct.

Sponsored content, where it ever exists, is clearly labeled as such on the affected page. We have not run sponsored-content pieces to date; if we do in the future, the labeling standard is "Sponsored" at the top of the affected page in a visible, non-removable position.

Regulatory framework

The disclosure practices on this site are designed to comply with the FTC's Endorsement Guides (16 CFR Part 255), which require clear and conspicuous disclosure of material connections between endorsers and advertisers, and with the FTC's disclosure guidance generally. We aim to err on the side of more disclosure rather than less.

If you believe a specific page does not meet our disclosure standards or the FTC's expectations, please contact the editorial inbox so we can review and correct.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-17 This page is for general educational purposes and is not personalized financial, tax, or legal advice. Consult a qualified professional for advice specific to your situation.