If our main focus was to make money when our readers bought products, we’d be recommending anything we thought we could convince you to buy, just to make a buck. Those affiliate links help to support our efforts in providing you with real, useful information about the things you want to buy.
Reputable sites like ours and the others listed above will usually also include affiliate links, but our primary goal is to help you. If a site looks or feels suspicious, trust your gut. If you’re on a budget, adding phrases like “under $X” may help narrow your results as well. Google “best ” or " reviews" and look for content from trustworthy sites like Reviewed, The Wirecutter, CNET, and Consumer Reports. These reviews give you an impartial look at how a product actually works, and we’re not the only ones out there trying out products either. We pit popular brands against one another and learn more about how they actually work to determine which has the best value and which you might want to avoid entirely. Here at Reviewed, we have tested ( and are continually testing) hundreds and hundreds of products from refrigerators and ovens to laptops and TVs to chef’s knives and hair dryers. One of the first things my Editor-in-Chief told me on my first day at Reviewed (something I now repeat like helpful word vomit) is “there’s no such thing as a good deal on a bad product.” No matter how dirt cheap a price may be, if the thing you’re buying doesn’t work as advertised, you did not get a good deal. Study up on whatever you're looking to buy so you can choose the best one.