Commercial transparency

Affiliate & Advertising Disclosure

This page explains how Compare Mounjaro Prices may earn revenue, how affiliate links work, how advertising is identified, and how editorial independence is protected.

Last reviewed: 6 April 2026 Purpose: transparency about commercial relationships

Why this disclosure exists

Compare Mounjaro Prices is a comparison and information website. Some links on the site may be affiliate links. That means the site may earn a commission or referral payment if a user clicks through to a third-party provider and later completes a qualifying action.

This page is intended to explain that commercial model clearly so users can understand how the site is funded.

Important: the site provides comparison content and general information. It is not a pharmacy, clinic or prescribing service, and this page is not an advertisement for a prescription-only medicine.

How affiliate links work

An affiliate link is a tracked link to a third-party provider. If a user clicks that link and later completes a qualifying action, such as making a purchase, starting a paid service or completing another tracked conversion, the site may receive a commission.

Key point: where a commission is paid, it is generally paid by the provider as part of its marketing arrangements. It is not presented as an extra charge added by this website.

Not every provider link is necessarily monetised in the same way, and some listed providers may not have any affiliate relationship with the site at all.

Types of commercial relationships

Affiliate commissions

The site may receive a commission when a qualifying referral results from a tracked link.

Referral arrangements

Some providers may operate referral or partner arrangements that pay for attributed customer introductions.

Advertising or sponsored placements

If the site ever carries sponsored placements or paid promotional placements, they should be clearly identified as such.

Transparency rule: any paid promotional placement should be clearly distinguishable from ordinary editorial or comparison content.

How revenue supports the site

Revenue may be used to support the operation and maintenance of the website, including technical upkeep, provider research, content updates, compliance review, and general editorial work.

Typical uses

  • Website hosting and development
  • Provider and pricing review work
  • Editorial updates and policy pages
  • Operational and administrative costs

User-facing effect

  • The site remains free to access
  • Comparison content can continue to be updated
  • Transparency and policy pages can be maintained
  • Users can review multiple providers in one place

Editorial independence

The site’s commercial relationships are intended to be kept separate from editorial judgement. The purpose of the disclosure is not only to explain how the site earns revenue, but also to make clear that commercial arrangements should not decide factual content.

Editorial commitment: commercial relationships should not determine whether factual information is corrected, whether policy pages are updated, or whether general informational content is framed accurately.

What this means in practice

  • Provider inclusion should not depend only on commission availability.
  • Policy and informational pages should be written for clarity and compliance, not conversion pressure.
  • Material corrections should not be withheld because a provider is commercially important.

What users should understand

  • Some links may be commercial links.
  • Not every listed provider is necessarily a paying partner.
  • Users should still carry out their own final provider checks.

Important limits on public-facing content

Because prescription-only medicines cannot be advertised to the public in the UK, this website should avoid public-facing content that crosses from neutral comparison or informational material into unlawful promotion.

Important compliance point: public-facing content should not use affiliate or advertising arrangements to encourage the purchase of a prescription-only medicine, and special-price framing around a specific prescription-only medicine is especially sensitive under current UK rules.
  • This page is about commercial transparency, not medicine promotion.
  • Editorial content should remain factual, cautious and non-promotional.
  • Advertising and sponsorship should be identifiable where they appear.
  • Users should be directed toward qualified healthcare professionals for treatment decisions.

Third-party providers

When a user clicks through to a third-party website, that provider controls its own website, consultation process, prescribing decisions, fulfilment process, pricing, delivery terms, customer service and privacy practices.

This site does not control

  • Prescribing decisions
  • Clinical eligibility assessments
  • Provider terms and conditions
  • Stock, delivery or fulfilment

Users should verify

  • Provider identity and registration
  • Final pricing and any extra charges
  • Consultation and prescribing arrangements
  • Any provider-specific legal or medical terms

How sponsored content should be handled

If the site publishes sponsored content, paid placements, or other promotional placements in the future, those placements should be clearly labelled so users can distinguish them from ordinary editorial and comparison content.

Clear labelling examples: “Sponsored”, “Advertisement”, “Paid placement”, or another equally clear label placed where users will reasonably see it.

Questions about this disclosure

If you have a question about affiliate links, commercial relationships, or how advertising is identified on the site, you can contact the website using the normal contact route.

This contact route is for website and disclosure questions only. It is not for medical emergencies or personal treatment advice.

Medical reminder: if you need advice about treatment suitability, side effects, dosing or any medical concern, speak to a qualified healthcare professional rather than relying on this website.