Disclose clearly.
Disclosure isn't red tape — it's how you keep your audience's trust and stay on the right side of the FTC. The rule is simple: if you have a material connection (a commission, a free product, a discount), say so clearly, right where you make the recommendation.
This page is educational, not legal advice. Verify current FTC requirements for your specific situation.
"Clear and conspicuous," with the endorsement.
The FTC's revised Endorsement Guides require you to disclose any "material connection" clearly and conspicuously — placed with the recommendation, not hidden away.
Where and how to disclose.
The placement that counts as "clear and conspicuous" depends on the medium.

No fake reviews. No fake followers.
The FTC's Consumer Reviews and Testimonials Rule (2024) bans fake or AI-generated reviews and fake social-media indicators — like purchased followers or views — with steep civil penalties per violation.
- Banned: fake or AI-generated reviews and testimonials.
- Banned: fake follower and view counts to inflate influence.
- Enforcement is real: the FTC issued its first step (warning letters to 10 companies) in December 2025.
Disclosure lines you can use.
- "This post contains paid links — I earn a commission if you buy, at no extra cost to you."
- "Paid link." (placed right with the product mention)
- "I get commissions for purchases made through links in this post."
- "Some of these were gifted; I only recommend things I'd buy myself."
Keep it in your own voice, but keep it unmistakable. If a reasonable person could miss it, it isn't conspicuous enough.
Now promote with confidence.
With clear disclosure in place, focus on the formats that actually convert — honestly.