Affiliate Disclosure

Apex 3D Print Lab Disclosure

Apex 3D Print Lab may use affiliate links on some pages. If you click one of those links and make a purchase, the site may earn a commission. That does not increase the price you pay, and it does not turn every page into a paid recommendation.

Amazon statement: “As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.”

What This Means in Plain English

Some product links on this site are affiliate links. That means Apex 3D Print Lab may receive a commission if a reader clicks through and buys something. The purpose of that relationship is to help support the site’s research, editing, and maintenance work.

A commission is possible only when a reader chooses to buy through a qualifying link. It is not a separate fee charged to the reader.

What Affiliate Links Do Not Mean

They do not guarantee positive coverage

A product does not belong in a guide just because it can be linked. Relevance, compatibility, and use-case fit matter more than link availability.

They do not add extra cost to your purchase

If you buy through an affiliate link, the commission is paid by the retailer or affiliate program, not added as an extra charge on top of your order.

They do not mean every page is commercial

Some pages exist to explain workflows, maintenance, troubleshooting, or editorial standards and may include no affiliate links at all.

They do not replace judgment

The site tries to recommend products only when they fit the exact decision being discussed, instead of stuffing a page with generic buttons.

Where You Will Usually See Disclosures

  • Near affiliate links or product recommendation sections.
  • At the beginning of buyer-intent pages where product links are part of the decision flow.
  • On this disclosure page as the site-wide explanation of how affiliate relationships work.

The goal is to make the relationship understandable without forcing readers to search for the explanation.

How Amazon Links Fit Into the Site

Apex 3D Print Lab uses Amazon affiliate links in some buying guides and recommendation sections where a reader may reasonably want to compare price or availability. Those links are meant to support real product decisions such as choosing filament, maintenance tools, accessories, or printer-related consumables.

They should not be interpreted as a claim that Amazon is always the only or best place to buy a product.

How We Try to Handle This Responsibly

  • We try to match product links to the actual topic instead of dropping the same generic link everywhere.
  • We avoid pretending that a product was directly tested if that is not true.
  • We revise pages when products change, disappear, or no longer fit the recommendation.
  • We increasingly prepare content in a manual review flow before publication so weak automation does not go straight live.

If You Have Questions

If you want more context on how recommendations are prepared, the best companion page is How We Test, which explains the editorial process behind product selection, compatibility checks, and refresh decisions.

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