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How to Promote Affiliate Links Without a Website

You don't need a blog or a website to start earning as an affiliate. Here's how to promote affiliate links using the platforms you're probably already on.

Published on July 5, 2026

by Fawaz

How to Promote Affiliate Links Without a Website

How to Promote Affiliate Links Without a Website

You don't need a blog or a website to start earning as an affiliate.

Here's how to promote affiliate links using the platforms you're probably already on.

The biggest myth in affiliate marketing is that you need a website before you can start.

It's not true.

Some of the highest-earning affiliates never build one.

They promote through social media, video, email, and communities instead, and those channels can convert just as well, sometimes better, because they feel more personal than a blog post.

This guide covers the real ways to promote affiliate links with no website at all, and how to do each one properly.

Why you don't actually need a website

A website is one distribution channel among many.

What actually drives affiliate sales is trust and relevant traffic, meaning the right people seeing your recommendation at the right time.

A website is just one way to get that.

Social platforms, video, and email all deliver the same thing, often faster, since they already have built-in audiences and discovery.

The one thing you do need, regardless of channel, is a link you can actually share.

Some networks let you post raw affiliate URLs.

Many platforms don't, which is why a link-in-bio tool or a short link matters more than a website ever did.

Keep that in mind as you read the channels below.

It also matters what that link does.

A plain tracking link only tells a merchant who sent the click.

A link that also applies a discount automatically the moment someone lands on the store gives your audience a real reason to click through right now instead of bookmarking it for later.

Affilitrak builds this in: affiliate links can carry an auto-apply coupon, so the shopper gets their discount without typing a code, and you get a link that sells itself a little harder than a plain one would.

1. Social media platforms

Each platform has different rules and different strengths, so it helps to match your promotion style to where you're posting.

Instagram

Affiliate links usually go in your bio link or in Stories, since captions and comments generally aren't clickable.

A single bio link tool can hold several affiliate links at once if you're promoting more than one program.

Reels and carousels that genuinely review or demonstrate a product tend to outperform posts that just say "link in bio."

TikTok

TikTok Shop and bio links are your two main paths. Short, honest videos that show a product in use, a quick demo or a "here's what changed for me," consistently beat anything that reads like a straight ad.

TikTok rewards content that would work even without the affiliate link attached.

Codes matter a lot here, since viewers often screenshot a video and check back later rather than clicking through immediately.

If your link applies a discount automatically, like Affilitrak's auto-apply coupon links, you skip the "wait, what was the code again" drop-off entirely.

The shopper lands on the store with the discount already active.

Facebook

Facebook Groups built around a specific interest are strong for affiliate promotion, because the audience already trusts the group and its recommendations.

Personal profiles and Pages can share links directly in posts, which makes Facebook one of the more link-friendly platforms.

Pinterest

Pinterest is a search engine as much as a social platform, and pins have a long shelf life.

Affiliate links can go directly on pins for many programs, and a well-made pin can keep sending traffic for months after you post it.

X (formerly Twitter)

Good for real-time recommendations and building a following around a niche.

Threads that walk through a genuine use case or comparison tend to perform better than a single link with no context.

Whatever platform you choose, read its affiliate link policy before you start.

Some restrict certain link types or require disclosure in specific places, and getting flagged for a policy violation can cost you the account, not just the post.

2. YouTube and video content

Video is one of the strongest formats for affiliate promotion, because people trust seeing a product actually used.

  • Reviews and comparisons: let you place affiliate links directly in the video description, which is one of the few places a raw link works cleanly.
  • Tutorials and how-tos: that naturally include a product or tool tend to convert well, since the viewer is already looking for a solution.
  • Shorts: can point viewers to a link in your channel description or a pinned comment, since Shorts descriptions have limited visibility.

Mention your affiliate link out loud in the video itself, not just in the description.

Plenty of viewers never scroll down to check it.

3. Email and newsletters

You don't need a huge list to make email work.

Even a few hundred engaged subscribers can outperform a much larger, passive social following, because people who opted into your email already trust your recommendations.

  • Send genuine recommendations, not a wall of links. One or two well-placed links in a newsletter beat ten scattered through the copy.
  • Segment where you can, since a recommendation that fits the reader's actual interest converts far better than a generic blast.
  • Be upfront that the email contains affiliate links. Many email platforms also require this in their terms.
  • If your link already applies a discount, say so in the email itself. "Discount applied automatically at checkout" removes the last bit of friction and is a better subject line hook than a bare link.

4. Communities and forums

Niche communities, whether on Reddit, Discord, Slack groups, or dedicated forums, can be some of the highest-trust places to promote, precisely because most of them ban blatant self-promotion.

The approach that works: answer the actual question someone asked, and mention your link only when it's a genuinely useful part of the answer.

Read the community's rules first, since many forbid affiliate links entirely, and a single violation can get you banned from a source that would have driven consistent traffic for years.

5. Paid promotion (use with caution)

Running paid ads that point directly at an affiliate link is possible on some platforms, but it comes with real risk.

You're paying for clicks before you know if the campaign profits, many affiliate programs explicitly prohibit certain kinds of paid promotion, and margins are often too thin on lower-commission products to make ads worthwhile.

If you try this, start with a very small budget and confirm the program allows it first.

Tools that replace a website

A few tools cover what a website used to do, without the cost or upkeep:

  • Link-in-bio tools hold multiple links behind one profile URL
  • Link shorteners clean up long, ugly affiliate URLs so they look more trustworthy
  • A free landing page builder can host a simple one-page review if you ever want something a little more permanent, without the cost of a full website

None of these are required to start.

They're just useful once you're posting consistently and want a cleaner way to manage several links at once.

What actually matters more than the channel

Regardless of where you promote, a few things consistently separate affiliates who earn from those who don't:

  • Genuine use: Promote products you'd recommend even without the commission. Audiences can tell the difference, and it shows in your conversion rate.
  • Context over links: A link with a real reason behind it converts far better than a link dropped with no explanation.
  • Consistency: One good post rarely moves the needle. A steady stream of honest content compounds over weeks and months.
  • Disclosure: Say clearly that a link is an affiliate link. It's required in most places, and it also builds trust rather than costing you.

Finding programs worth promoting

None of this works without programs that are actually worth your time to promote.

Look for flexible commissions, reliable tracking, and, if you want income that compounds instead of resetting every month, programs that pay recurring commissions rather than a single one-time payout.

This is where a marketplace like the Affilitrak marketplace becomes useful.

Instead of hunting down individual programs one by one, you can browse programs in one place, including Shopify app programs that pay recurring commissions on subscriptions rather than a single flat fee.

One account lets you promote both storefront brands and apps, so you're not managing a different login and dashboard for every program you join.

It also changes what you're actually promoting.

Every link you get through Affilitrak can carry an auto-apply coupon, so instead of sharing a plain tracking link and hoping people remember to check out, you're sharing a link that discounts the store the moment someone clicks it.

That's a stronger pitch in a caption, a video description, or a bio, and it's one less reason for a follower to hesitate.

From your own affiliate dashboard, you can see which links are converting, what you're owed, and your full payout history in one place, so you always know exactly where you stand.

Conclusion

You don't need a website to promote affiliate links well.

You need the right channel for how you already create, links that are easy to share and track, and products you genuinely believe in.

Social media, video, email, and communities can all outperform a website, especially early on when consistency matters more than polish.

Start with the one or two channels you already enjoy using, be upfront about your links, and focus on being genuinely useful before you focus on converting.

The income follows.

Want a place to find programs worth promoting, including ones that pay recurring commissions? Browse the Affilitrak marketplace and join free.