An affiliate-ready page that keeps future monetisation transparent.
If the site is going to carry referral links later, it needs a clean disclosure page from day one. That is good practice for readers, useful for platform trust, and important if the site is ever reviewed by advertisers or a potential buyer.
How affiliate content should sit on a site like this
The best fit is selective, relevant, and well signposted. On this kind of site, affiliate content should not drown out the core service pages. It should sit alongside them as a separate commercial layer: perhaps local wellness recommendations, booking tools, spa gift suggestions, recovery products, or travel-related content for people visiting Melbourne. The point is that the reader should always know when a recommendation could result in a commission.
That is why this page exists before any affiliate links are added. It makes the intent transparent and avoids the look of an afterthought.
Disclosure statement
Some pages on this site may, now or in the future, include referral links. If a reader clicks one of those links and later makes a purchase or booking, the site may receive a commission at no extra cost to the reader. Any such links should only be used where they are relevant to the topic of the page and where they make sense for the audience.
