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Question Is affiliate marketing still profitable going into 2026?

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(@ritap)
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Joined: 4 weeks ago

It’s a quiet Sunday here - kids are out, husband’s in the greenhouse, and I’ve been down yet another YouTube road to nowhere : “how to make passive income in 2025”. 😅

The thing is... the more I watch, the more confused I get. Half of them say affiliate marketing is dead - “too competitive, AI has taken over, Google updates are killing everything.” The other half say it’s never been better - “more niches than ever, new tools, new opportunities.”

So I’m sitting here wondering: what’s the truth?

I’ve only been dabbling for a year or so - mostly blogging around sustainability and eco-friendly living. I’ve made about £50 total (so, you know... not exactly early retirement money 😆). But I like the process - writing, learning SEO, figuring out what people actually search for.

Still, part of me can’t help but ask..

Is affiliate marketing still genuinely profitable going into 2026 or is it becoming something only veterans with authority sites and huge budgets can realistically make work?

I’d love to hear some honest thoughts - especially from those who’ve been doing this a while.

Has it changed that much?
Is the “affiliate dream” still alive?
And what would you focus on today if you were starting over?

I’ll be here with my cuppa ... Smile


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(@rohanm)
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Joined: 2 years ago

Hey Rita, great question and honestly, spot on for a Sunday scroll with a cup of tea in hand.

Short version from me: yep, affiliate marketing is still profitable, but not in the “throw up a few blog posts and wait for Amazon clicks” kind of way. It’s changed shape.

These days it feels more like:

  • Less passive, more active - you have to treat it like a small business, not a side experiment.

  • Mix your traffic - SEO still works, but pairing it with Pinterest, Reddit, Medium etc makes a big difference.

  • The money's in the list - it's an age old mantra but more true now than ever. Cast your net and grab that email address!
  • Trust beats tactics - the web is full of AI fluff now, but real voices still cut through. When you write from experience, people can tell.

I’ve been around this game for a while (my first site got nuked pre-2010). Came back after a decade+ in the wilderness just as AI tools started making it easier for one person to run what used to take a small team. What’s changed most for me going into 2026 is that affiliate marketing hasn’t died - it’s just grown up a bit.

Those who pick a niche they actually care about, make useful content, and build slowly are still winning. The “get rich by next Friday” crowd... not so much. Although black-hat quick wins do still work, but it's not a business you can sell unless you're SEO Jesus ... ha ha ha!

So if you’ve already made £50, that’s a solid start. Most people never even make the first pound. You’re learning the ropes, building skills, and laying the foundation for something that can absolutely work long-term.

Now, I’m off for a bit of a Diwali slap-up meal with the fam. I might not get back into the keyword spreadsheets I've been lost in this weekend. 😅


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Posts: 22
(@sarahggal)
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Joined: 2 months ago

@ritap I’ll throw in my two cents as someone who’s juggling a 9-5, two kids, and a small portfolio of sites that sometimes get more attention than my laundry pile. 😅

For me, affiliate marketing is absolutely still profitable, but it’s become less about “how many articles you publish” and more about how well you connect with readers.

When I first started (around 2021), I was churning out keyword-heavy posts because that’s what every tutorial said to do. It sort of worked… until it didn’t.

These days, the posts that actually make consistent affiliate sales are the ones where I’ve shared real experiences - the product I tried, what worked, what didn’t, how it fits into daily life.

Going into 2026, people are getting really good at sniffing out generic content from a mile away. It's everywhere, after all. Long, thoughtful content still works if it actually helps someone make a decision.

Platforms change, principles don’t - whether it’s SEO, Pinterest, or short-form video, trust is more important than ever.

So yes, affiliate marketing still works - but like Rohan said, it’s matured. It’s not easy money, but it’s definitely real money for those who stick with it.

Today, £50 .. then £500 and before long you're waving goodbye to your boss! It's perfectly possible. Keep writing. Keep testing. The learning curve feels slow and then it all clicks!

Now if only Google would stop “testing” my rankings every other week… 😂


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Andy
Posts: 277
 Andy
Admin
(@andy)
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Joined: 2 years ago

Posted by: @sarahggal

Platforms change, principles don’t - whether it’s SEO, Pinterest, or short-form video, trust is more important than ever.

I think this is the thing we see over and over again - that the platforms do change, but the marketing principles behind them don't. 

Affiliate marketing in the general sense is here to stay - if you think about it, someone going door to door trying to sell something (and makes a commission off of it) is doing exactly what every affiliate marketer is trying to do. 

Having said that, I do think that it's getting a little more difficult to quickly make money with affiliate marketing, but that just helps weed out all the spammers and 'get-rich-quick' people. Brands still need us marketers (just as much as we need them). 


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Posts: 22
Topic starter
(@ritap)
Trusted Member
Joined: 4 weeks ago

Just catching up on all this before bed and I have to say… what a brilliant thread this turned into.

I’ve been sitting here reading over the forum with one eye open and the other half on a mug of tea that went cold about an hour ago. But still, feeling a lot more hopeful than I did when I wrote the first post.

It’s funny really - I came in thinking maybe affiliate marketing had had its day, but now it feels more like it’s just... evolved a bit. Less “quick win”, more “learn the craft, enjoy the ride”. I can live with that.

I like what everyone said about trust and real experiences. Makes me think I’ve been overcomplicating it. Maybe I just need to stop reading “how to” guides and start writing about what I actually know - the eco stuff I use, the little things that make life simpler.

Also slightly relieved to know it’s not just me battling Google’s mood swings. Every time I think I’ve cracked it, it changes its mind like a teenager.

Anyway, I’m rambling now and it’s well past bedtime. Thanks all for sharing your thoughts - it’s made me want to give this another proper go. Maybe after some sleep... and possibly a stronger cup of coffee in the morning.


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