Affiliate disclosure
Plain and up front: some of the tool links on this site are affiliate links, and I want you to know exactly how that works.
What an affiliate link is
A few of the tools I recommend run affiliate programs. If you click one of those links and later sign up or buy, I may earn a commission — at no extra cost to you. You pay the same price you'd pay going direct.
The programs I use
I only use affiliate links for a small, fixed set of tools I genuinely recommend:
- vidIQ and TubeBuddy — YouTube research and SEO tools.
- ElevenLabs and Murf — AI voiceover tools.
That's the whole list. Other tools I mention — like Storyblocks, Envato Elements, DaVinci Resolve, CapCut, or the free stock libraries — are not affiliate links; I include them because they're genuinely useful. And I deliberately do not use affiliate links for some higher-paying tools (such as template-to-video generators) because I don't think they're the right choice for a channel that wants to stay monetizable.
The promise
A commission never decides what I recommend or what order things appear in. The whole point of this site is honest, sourced numbers — if I tilted recommendations toward whatever pays the most, the site wouldn't be worth reading. Where a recommendation could earn me a commission, I say so on the page.
No income promises
Nothing on EarnFacts is a promise that you'll earn a particular amount. The figures here describe what data shows other people and channels have earned, with sources and caveats attached — they are not a prediction of your results.
Questions about any of this? The honest-by-default approach extends to disclosure too — see the about page for why the site works the way it does.