Affiliate Disclosure
Affiliate partnerships with online casino operators are what pay for Quickbet. Below you'll find precisely how that arrangement runs, what it means for your wallet, and the safeguards that stop revenue from swaying anything we publish. Broader background about the operation lives on the About page, and our headline operator review is the Quickbet Casino homepage. Seen a notice like this elsewhere and want only what's different here? Jump to the condensed summary at the bottom.
1. How Quickbet gets paid
When a reader clicks an affiliate link on Quickbet and opens an account on the operator's site, Quickbet may earn a commission. That commission is paid by the operator out of its own marketing budget. It doesn't come from the reader and adds no cost on the operator's platform. Two structures are common across the industry, and Quickbet uses both depending on the partnership: a fixed CPA (cost-per-acquisition) paid once when a qualifying account is created, and a revenue-share arrangement under which a small slice of the operator's net gaming revenue from that account flows back to Quickbet over time. The mechanics stay invisible to the reader; the only practical effect is that the operator knows, when an account is created, that the click began on this site.
2. What it costs you
Nothing. Affiliate links cost the reader precisely the same as direct ones. Bonus offers don't change. Stakes don't change. Withdrawal speeds don't change. What you'd pay to play on the operator's site is identical whether you arrive via a Quickbet link, a Google ad, or by typing the URL straight into your browser. If anything, partnership pages now and then carry an exclusive welcome offer a shade better than the default. Where that happens, we flag it plainly in the relevant review.
3. Why this is allowed to be neutral
The honest answer is reputation arithmetic. A casino review site lives or dies by being right about which operators are worth joining. Pad scores to flatter partner brands, and within a few months the audience that drives traffic — and therefore commissions — drifts to a competitor. The long-term commercial interest of an affiliate site lines up exactly with its editorial interest: tell the truth about which operators are good and which aren't. One consistent rating framework is applied in the same way to every operator we review, partner or not. Quickbet has rated partner operators at six and below, and operators with no commercial relationship at eight and above.
4. What "not influencing the review" means in practice
Three concrete rules. First, partnership status feeds nothing into the score: the eight criteria are graded against observed performance, full stop. Second, partnership status unlocks no kinder framing: where a partner operator has a problem — slow withdrawals, murky bonus terms, a thin live-dealer catalogue — that problem shows up in the review under the relevant criterion. Third, operators don't pre-approve content. We send no drafts for sign-off. Operators see Quickbet content for the first time when it goes live, the same as everybody else.
A further pair of rules governs factual updates. Should an operator contact us about a genuine mistake in a Quickbet review, we examine the point raised, amend it where warranted, and append a dated footnote to the piece describing the change — partner or not, the handling is identical. Should an operator instead protest that a low verdict feels "unfair" while naming no actual error, the verdict holds, and we explain that one rating methodology covers everyone without exception.
5. Recognising affiliate links
Each commercial link leaving Quickbet for an operator wears the rel="nofollow noreferrer noopener" attribute, the recognised way of telling search engines a link belongs to a paid arrangement. Usually that link first reaches a tracking redirect at /go on this domain, which logs the click for our internal figures and then sends you onward to the operator. Your browser arrives at the destination precisely as a direct visit would leave it — nothing extra is tacked onto the target address on your end. A handful of Quickbet links — those pointing at regulators, helplines, news outlets and game studios — are not commercial at all, and they wear rel="noreferrer noopener" by itself.
6. Compliance with disclosure rules
On the UK side, the governing law is the Consumer Rights Act 2015 (which outlaws deceptive trading) alongside CMA and ASA guidance on hidden affiliate marketing — all insisting that paid ties be made plain enough for an ordinary reader to see that a link is commercial. This very page acts as Quickbet's site-wide disclosure; beyond it, each operator review shows an inline note above its first sponsored button, so the tie is obvious without anyone scrolling down. Readers abroad should bear in mind too that the FTC in the United States and the CMA in the United Kingdom expect equivalent disclosure for advertising aimed at their own populations.
7. Commitments to readers
The summary obligations Quickbet takes on from this funding model are brief. Disclosure is upfront and visible, never buried. Reviews follow a fixed methodology that doesn't bend for partners. Errors are corrected on a published timeline. Operators don't preview content. Affiliate status is signalled in the markup so technically literate readers can check it. A full account of the editorial process — fact-checking, source standards, correction handling — is on the Editorial Policy page. Anything that looks like a breach of these rules can be raised through the Contact page, and substantive complaints are logged against the relevant review.
8. Wider context for readers
Three points sit beside this disclosure. The player-protection commitments built into every operator score are spelled out on the Responsible Gambling page. The privacy practices covering any data gathered from you while reading Quickbet are on the Privacy Policy page, with the technical detail of cookies and similar storage on the Cookie Policy page. The full menu of what we cover is the Quickbet Casino homepage and the links leading off it.
