Affiliate disclosure
Affiliate Disclosure
The Wallet Bible may earn compensation when readers click certain links or sign up for products through partner programs.
Last updated: May 13, 2026
How affiliate links work
Some links on The Wallet Bible may be affiliate or referral links. If a reader clicks one of those links and later signs up, buys, or requests a quote, the site may earn compensation at no extra cost to the reader.
Affiliate redirects may use `/go/*` paths so links can be tracked, checked for broken destinations, and updated safely when approved partner URLs change.
Editorial standard
Articles should solve the reader problem first. Partner links are meant to be the next step only when a tool, quote, account, or provider comparison fits the topic. The site does not treat compensation as proof that a product is best for every reader.
Reader checklist before clicking
- Confirm that the product solves the exact problem described in the article.
- Check the current provider fees, cancellation rules, renewal terms, and eligibility requirements.
- Compare at least one alternative when the decision affects insurance, investing, credit, payroll, or business operations.
Sponsored content
If The Wallet Bible publishes sponsored content, it should be labeled clearly. Sponsored placement should not remove disclosure, reader warnings, or the need to verify provider terms.