Affiliate Disclosure
How commission works on Royal Bonus Deck.
Some links on this site point to casino partners. If you choose to
visit a featured casino through one of those links and later create
an account, we may receive a commission. That commission does not
add a separate charge to you, but it does mean the link carries a
commercial relationship.
The relationship does not decide the order on the page. Editorial
choice comes first. A casino can be commercially available and still
be left out if the bonus wording feels awkward, the site tone feels
uncertain or the overall experience does not seem strong enough for
a recommendation. In the same way, a featured brand can be placed
below another one if the second card simply reads better for a UK
visitor.
When we may earn
Commission may be earned after a qualifying action defined by the
partner programme. In practice that often means a new registration,
a first deposit or another approved event. The exact commercial
terms sit between Royal Bonus Deck and the partner, not between the
partner and the reader.
What stays separate
Rankings, wording and editorial criticism stay under our control.
We may rewrite a card, lower a placement or remove a listing if the
page no longer feels suitable for our audience. A commercial link
is not a permanent guarantee of inclusion.
How links appear
Outbound casino links usually open in a new tab and may carry rel
attributes such as sponsored, nofollow or noopener. Those labels
help describe the nature of the link and improve the security of
the browsing experience.
What readers should do
Treat the site as an editorial starting point, not a substitute
for reading the casino’s own terms. Offers change, limits vary and
eligibility matters. You should always read the operator’s current
conditions before registering or depositing.
Questions about disclosure
If you want to ask how a page is monetised or whether a specific
link is commercial, contact us at contact@royalbonusdeck.co.uk.
We would rather answer plainly than pretend the arrangement is
invisible.
Editorial principle
The rule is straightforward: the reader should be able to trust
that a card sits where it does for editorial reasons. If that rule
becomes hard to defend, the page needs rewriting.