When you see a "Top 10" list on a major review site, you assume those products are there because of quality. Unfortunately, placement on these lists is often auctioned off to the highest bidder. Let's pull back the curtain on the "pay-to-play" economy and why you can't trust every ranking you read.
The Illusion of Merit
"Top 10 Best Laptops of 2025"
"5 Best Air Fryers Under $100"
"The 7 Vacuums Experts Actually Recommend"
These headlines promise expert curation. You assume someone tested dozens of products and selected the best ones.
In reality, many of these lists are just ads in disguise.
How Pay-to-Play Works
Here's the business model:
- A review site creates a "Top 10" list
- Brands/retailers pay to be included (or pay higher affiliate commissions)
- The list is published as "editorial content"
- Readers assume it's an honest recommendation
- Readers click and buy
- The site earns commission (often 5-15% of the sale)
The best products don't necessarily make the list. The products that pay the most do.
Real Example: Vacuum Cleaners
I analyzed 20 "Best Vacuum" lists from major review sites. Here's what I found:
- Dyson appeared on 19 out of 20 lists
- Shark appeared on 18 out of 20 lists
- Bissell appeared on 16 out of 20 lists
Are these objectively the three best vacuum brands? Maybe. Or maybe they just have the most generous affiliate programs.
Dyson pays around 8% commission per sale. Smaller brands pay 2-3%. Guess which one gets recommended more often?
The Ranking Formula
Most "Top 10" lists aren't ranked by quality. They're ranked by a formula:
Position = (Affiliate Commission × Conversion Rate) + Buffer for Credibility
Translation:
- Products that pay high commissions rank higher
- Products that convert well (people actually buy them) rank higher
- A few "credible" lower-commission products are sprinkled in to maintain trust
Quality? That's optional.
The "Expert" Myth
Many review sites claim their recommendations come from "experts."
Who are these experts?
- Freelance writers paid $50 to compile a list from Amazon reviews
- AI tools that scrape existing reviews and rewrite them
- Marketing teams optimizing for commission revenue
In rare cases, actual experts are involved. But even then, their recommendations are filtered through a business development team that prioritizes monetization.
The Amazon Influencer Program
Amazon's influencer program has made this even worse.
Here's how it works:
- Content creators get a custom Amazon storefront
- They curate "lists" of products
- They earn commission on sales
Sounds reasonable. But the incentive is clear: recommend expensive products with high commissions, not cheap products with low commissions.
An influencer makes more money recommending a $200 blender (8% commission = $16) than a $50 blender (8% commission = $4).
Guess which one gets recommended more?
How to Spot Pay-to-Play Lists
Red flags that a "Top 10" list is pay-to-play:
- Same brands across multiple sites - If every site recommends Dyson, Shark, and Bissell, they're following affiliate $ not quality
- Vague review criteria - "We considered performance, value, and design" means nothing
- No mention of testing - Real reviews describe hands-on testing. Pay-to-play lists just summarize specs
- Affiliate disclaimers buried at bottom - They legally have to disclose, but they hide it
- Lists never change - If the "Best Laptops of 2025" is identical to 2024's list, it's not being updated based on real testing
The FTC's Rules (That Nobody Follows)
The Federal Trade Commission requires affiliate disclosure. Sites must clearly state when they earn commissions.
But compliance is a joke.
Most sites bury disclosure in 8-point gray text at the bottom of the page. Or they use vague language like "we may earn a commission from links on this page."
Users don't read it. And even if they do, it doesn't explain HOW commission affects ranking.
The Credibility Buffer
Smart pay-to-play sites include 1-2 legitimately good products that don't pay high commissions.
This serves two purposes:
- Plausible deniability - "See? We're not biased! We included this low-commission brand!"
- Maintaining trust - If every recommendation is expensive, users get suspicious
But these credible picks are always ranked #8 or #9. Never #1.
The Alternative: Actual Reviews
Not all review sites are corrupt. Here's what honest reviews look like:
- Wirecutter (NY Times) - Actual hands-on testing, clear methodology
- Consumer Reports - Paid by subscribers, not affiliates
- RTINGS - Detailed lab testing with published data
- Project Farm (YouTube) - Independent testing with no sponsors
These sites aren't perfect, but they prioritize quality over commission.
Find the Best Deal Without the Pay-to-Play Bias
FindPrices helps you compare prices fairly. We don't manipulate rankings based on commission; the cheapest option always appears first.
Compare Pricing Now - It's FreeWhat You Can Do
Don't trust "Top 10" lists at face value:
- Search for "Brand X vs Brand Y" - Direct comparisons are more honest than curated lists
- Check Reddit/Forums - Real users aren't paid to recommend products
- Read the methodology - If they don't explain how they tested, they probably didn't
- Look for negative reviews - Honest sites mention flaws, not just positives
- Use review aggregators - Sites that compile reviews from multiple sources are less biased
The Bottom Line
"Top 10" lists are marketing, not journalism.
They're designed to make the site money, not to help you find the best product.
The products that pay the most get recommended the most. Quality is secondary.
Don't let a pay-to-play list cost you money. Do your own research.