Most comparison tools are biased. Learn how to compare pricing and find the best deal without falling into the affiliate revenue trap.
It sounds counterintuitive: shouldn't a comparison site show you the cheapest price? Not if the cheapest retailer doesn't pay an affiliate commission. Most "impartial" comparison tools are actually carefully curated lists of partners who pay to be seen. Here is the dirty secret of the affiliate revenue trap.
When you use a "free" price comparison site, you're not the customer.
You're the product.
The actual customers are the retailers who pay the comparison site to send them traffic.
Here's how it works:
Sounds reasonable, right? The site provides value, they get compensated. Fair trade.
Except there's a catch: they only show you retailers who pay them.
Most comparison sites don't actually compare all prices. They compare prices from their "partner network."
If a retailer doesn't have an affiliate program or doesn't pay a high enough commission, they simply don't appear in the results.
This means the "cheapest price" you see is actually the cheapest price among retailers who pay the comparison site.
There might be 5 other retailers with better prices, but you'll never know they exist.
Let's say you're shopping for a Dell XPS 15 laptop.
Here's what a typical comparison site shows you:
The site proudly declares: "Retailer A has the best price!"
But here's what they didn't show you:
You thought you got the best price at $1,299. You actually overpaid by $100.
The comparison site made a commission. The retailer made a sale. You got screwed.
It gets worse.
Not all affiliate programs pay the same commission. Some retailers pay 2%, others pay 8%.
Guess which retailers get prioritized in the search results?
A comparison site makes more money sending you to a retailer that pays 8% commission than one that pays 2%, even if the 2% retailer has a lower price.
So the results aren't just filtered by "who pays us." They're also ranked by "who pays us the most."
Let's break down the incentives:
Scenario A: Show the Cheapest Price
Scenario B: Hide the Cheapest Price
By hiding the cheapest option, the comparison site makes 4.8x more money.
You pay $20 more. They earn $7.60 more.
The incentives are completely misaligned.
Comparison sites aren't evil. They're just businesses operating within the constraints of their business model.
To survive, they need revenue. Affiliate commissions are how they generate revenue.
But this creates an impossible conflict:
These goals are often in direct opposition.
When forced to choose between serving you and making money, most comparison sites choose money.
When confronted, comparison sites offer familiar defenses:
"We need revenue to operate"
True. But you could charge users a subscription fee instead of hiding the cheapest options. Most users would gladly pay $5/month for truly impartial results.
"We show affiliate relationships"
A tiny disclaimer buried in the footer doesn't count as transparency. Most users have no idea they're seeing filtered results.
"We still provide value"
Compared to visiting each retailer individually, yes. But compared to what you deserve (the actual cheapest price), no.
Here are red flags that a comparison site is filtering results for profit:
It doesn't have to be this way.
A comparison site could:
This would require putting user interests above short-term revenue. Most companies won't make that choice.
But some will.
FindPrices helps you compare prices across ALL retailers, not just the ones that pay us. The lowest price always appears first.
Compare Pricing Now - It's FreeDon't trust comparison sites at face value. Here's how to protect yourself:
Most comparison sites aren't designed to save you money. They're designed to make themselves money.
The cheapest price often comes from a retailer that doesn't pay affiliate commissions. Which means it won't appear in their results.
If you're relying on traditional comparison sites, you're probably overpaying.
Use tools that prioritize your savings, not their commissions.
FindPrices does the comparison shopping for you, every time. Quietly, automatically, on every product page.