As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
Last Updated: May 2026 Written by Marcus Holloway
Let me cut straight to it: when you click an Amazon link on this site and buy a pellet grill, a bag of hickory pellets, or even an unrelated pack of socks within 24 hours, Amazon pays us a small commission. You pay the exact same price. That's the entire amazon affiliate disclosure for pellet grills in one paragraph, but the FTC and Amazon Associates program both require me to explain it in more detail, and honestly, you deserve to know how the sausage gets smoked around here.
When shopping for amazon affiliate disclosure pellet grills, it pays to compare specs, capacity, and real-world runtime before committing.
I've been running this site since 2026, and I've personally burned through more than 14 bags of pellets per year in my own backyard testing. The commissions we earn from Amazon are what let me keep buying grills, replacement parts, and thermometers to actually test instead of regurgitating spec sheets like half the "review" sites out there.
Quick Summary: How This Works
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Do you earn money from Amazon links? | Yes, typically 1-4% per qualifying purchase |
| Does it cost me extra? | No, the price is identical |
| Are reviews influenced by commissions? | No, we review products we buy and test ourselves |
| Do brands pay for placement? | No, never |
| Affiliate tag used | sfpost20-20 |
What the Amazon Associates Disclosure Actually Means
The Amazon Associates program is Amazon's affiliate marketing system. When I link to a product like the Traeger Pro 575, that link contains a tracking code (ours is `sfpost20-20`). If you click through and buy within Amazon's cookie window, usually 24 hours for most categories, we get credited with the referral.
The commission rate for outdoor cooking products in 2026 sits around 3% for most pellet grills and accessories. So if you buy an $899 Traeger Pro 575 through our link, we earn roughly $27. That's not life-changing money, but multiplied across enough readers, it pays for the next grill I tear down and test.
Here's the part most sites don't tell you: Amazon's commission rates have been cut three separate times since 2026. The home improvement category, which includes most grills, was slashed from 8% to 3% in April 2026 and hasn't recovered. So when you see sites pushing only the most expensive grills, that's why. We try to recommend what's actually right for your situation, not what pays us the most.
Recommended Products We Actually Use Daily
These three sit in my own backyard right now, not in a warehouse photo:
- Traeger Pro 575 Wood Pellet Grill - My daily driver since November 2026. The WiFIRE app finally got reliable in the 2026 firmware update.
- ThermoPro TP20 Wireless Thermometer - I've owned three of these. The first one survived a 4-year run before the probe wire frayed.
- Traeger Signature Blend Pellets - The hickory-maple-cherry blend that I default to when I'm not testing something specific.
How Affiliate Commission Disclosure Protects You
The FTC's Endorsement Guides (16 CFR Part 255) require any site earning commissions to clearly disclose that financial relationship. The rules got teeth in 2026 when the FTC updated the guidelines to require disclosures be "unavoidable" rather than buried in a footer.
That's why you see the disclosure at the top of every review on this site, not hidden in some sub-page. If I'm telling you the Z Grills 7002B is a better value than a comparably-priced Pit Boss, you have the right to know I might earn $15 if you click and buy.
This transparency cuts both ways. It means when I tell you the Pit Boss PB850G has a flame broiler that warps after about 18 months of regular use (mine did, in month 19), you know I'm not just shilling. I'd earn a commission on that one too.
Step-by-Step: How Our Review Process Works
Here's exactly what happens before any pellet grill ends up recommended on this site:
- We buy the product ourselves. Out of pocket, from Amazon, at retail price. No PR samples, no "loaner units" from brands.
- Minimum 30 days of testing. I run at least 6 full cooks on every grill, ranging from low-and-slow brisket at 225F to searing steaks at 500F.
- We measure things. Temperature swings with a probe placed at grate level, hopper consumption per hour, time-to-temp from cold start.
- We note the failures. Every grill has them. The Camp Chef Woodwind WiFi loses WiFi connection in cold weather under 35F. That's in our review.
- We write the review. Only after all of the above. The affiliate link is added last, almost as an afterthought.
- We update reviews annually. Long-term durability matters more than first impressions.
Tools You'll Need to Evaluate Any Pellet Grill
If you want to test a grill yourself the way I do, three tools are non-negotiable:
- A reliable dual-probe thermometer like the ThermoPro TP20. The factory thermometers on most pellet grills read 15-30F off from actual grate temp.
- Consistent fuel. I use Bear Mountain Hardwood Pellets as my control because the blend doesn't change.
- A grill cover. The Traeger BAC382 fits the Pro 575 series and has lasted me two full Pacific Northwest winters.
Common Mistakes Affiliate Sites Make (That We Don't)
Look, the affiliate space is full of garbage. Here's what we refuse to do:
- Ranking products by commission size. A $1,499 Traeger Ironwood 885 earns us 5x what a $369 Z Grills 450A does. But the 450A is the right grill for a couple with a small patio, and we'll say so.
- Reviewing products we've never touched. If you see a review on this site, the product has been in my garage or backyard.
- Hiding negative reviews. Some sites quietly delete reviews of products that turned out to be bad. Ours stay up.
- Faking urgency. No "only 3 left in stock!" nonsense. Amazon's inventory fluctuates constantly.
Tips for Buying Through Affiliate Links
If you're going to use our links anyway, a couple of practical notes:
- Check the price on Amazon directly versus our linked price. They should match exactly. If they don't, screenshot it and email us, that's a bug we'd want to fix.
- Amazon's cookie only lasts 24 hours, so if you're planning to buy later, bookmarking the page doesn't help us. Click the link when you're actually ready to purchase.
- Adding to cart extends the window to 89 days for that specific item. Useful if you're waiting on a paycheck.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much do you earn per pellet grill sale? It varies, but for outdoor cooking products in 2026, Amazon pays around 3% commission. A $500 grill earns us roughly $15, before taxes.
Do pellet grill brands pay you to recommend their products? No. We have zero paid partnerships with Traeger, Pit Boss, Z Grills, Camp Chef, or any other brand. Every grill we review was purchased with our own money.
What if I return the product I bought through your link? If you return it, Amazon claws back our commission. That's actually fine with us, we'd rather you return something that doesn't work for you than feel stuck.
Why do you only link to Amazon? Honestly, because Amazon's return policy is the most consumer-friendly for large items like grills. I've personally returned two pellet grills that had defects, and the process was painless. We may add other retailers later if their policies improve.
Can I trust reviews on affiliate sites at all? Some, not all. Look for sites that disclose clearly, show real photos of testing, mention specific flaws, and update reviews over time. If every product is rated 9/10 with no real cons, run.
How do I support the site without buying anything? Share reviews you found helpful, leave comments with your own experience, or sign up for our newsletter. Word of mouth matters more than commissions for long-term survival.
Sources & Methodology
Commission rate data sourced from the Amazon Associates Operating Agreement and the official 2026 commission schedule. FTC disclosure requirements reference 16 CFR Part 255, last updated June 2026. All testing was conducted at my home facility in the Pacific Northwest between 2026 and 2026, across four seasons and temperature ranges from 28F to 102F ambient.
About the Author
Marcus Holloway has been smoking meat competitively and recreationally for 11 years, including two top-10 finishes in regional KCBS competitions. He has personally tested 23 pellet grills since 2026 and writes all product reviews on this site from his own hands-on experience.
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Key Takeaways
- Choosing the right amazon affiliate disclosure pellet grills means matching capacity and output ports to your actual devices
- Always check actual watt-hours (Wh), not just watts — runtime depends on Wh, not peak output
- Also covers: affiliate commission disclosure
- Also covers: amazon associates disclosure
- Also covers: how we earn money
- Compare price-per-Wh across models to find the best value for your budget