How​‍​‌‍​‍‌​‍​‌‍​‍‌ to Locate Your Competitors’ Affiliates (2026 Guide)

How to Find the Affiliates of Your Competitors

It turns out your rivals’ affiliate programs are a highly visible and prolific growth engine – if you are aware of where to find them. The following is a detailed playbook on how to discover their partner network and get hold of the same partners before they do.

The Reason This Is One of the Most Intelligent Competitive Moves You Could Make

Affiliate traffic is usually doing the heavy lifting when a competitor is rapidly growing.

Besides building from scratch a partner list, you can simply reverse-engineer theirs and try to recruit the same publishers by giving them a better offer.

And in 2026, this factor is not limited to traffic only.

AI answer engines like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google’s AI Overviews are very much dependent on count of brands that they see appearing across many independent, authoritative sites.

Your competitor’s affiliates — review blogs, comparison sites, YouTube creators — are the ones sending those visibility signals. Discover the affiliates, discover the channels, become the leader.

Primary Idea

Each affiliate makes their presence known. Via a tracking link. A UTM parameter. A discount code. An FTC disclosure. Your task is to trace those breadcrumbs up to the source.

7 Methods to Discover Competitor Affiliates

1. Hunt for their branded tracking links
Type “competitor.com/?ref=” or “competitor.com/?via=” on Google. Affiliates add tracking parameters to their URLs and Google indexes these. Reviews, listicles, and comparison articles will pop up to you almost immediately. Free, takes five minutes, offers instant results.

2. Look for disclosure statements
By the rules, affiliates are supposed to disclose their relationships. Enter “[competitor name]” + “affiliate disclosure” or “[competitor name]” + “this post contains affiliate links” in a search engine. It is quite possible that you will find dozens of active publishers with just one search.

3. Investigate the competitor’s own website
Certain programs make their partners publically visible. Conduct site:competitor.com “affiliates” OR “partners” OR “ambassador” query. Unveiled partner pages, case studies, and program landing pages often feature authentic publishers.

4. Affiliate networks
Maybe the competitor is running their program through Impact, ShareASale, CJ Affiliate, or PartnerStack, which you can join as an affiliate to see who the top performers are. Many networks show the earners and active publishers inside the dashboard. Free to join, and you see who is active.

5. Scavenge Reddit, YouTube, and review sites
Use Reddit to find posts like “[competitor name]” + “discount code” or watch YouTube review videos to see affiliate links usually given by creators for mid-tier and creator affiliates beyond recognition by any tool.

6. Take advantage of Ahrefs Link Intersect or Semrush Backlink Gap
These tools will tell you which sites are linking to your competitors but not to you. Look for affiliate-type anchors, for example, visit site, get started, discount codes, and brand names. You will be given a nicely arranged, ranked list of outreach prospects within minutes.

7. Look at coupon and cashback aggregators
Sites such as Honey, RetailMeNot, and Rakuten operate affiliate-fed coupon feeds. If your competitor’s promo codes are found there, these aggregators could be the ones running the affiliate programs.

Tool Comparison

ToolWhat It FindsCostBest For
Google Search OperatorsIndexed affiliate links & disclosuresFreeQuick wins, any budget
Ahrefs (Link Intersect)Sites linking to rivals but not youPaidPrioritized outreach lists
Semrush (Backlink Gap)Referring domains + anchor patternsPaidFull competitive audit
SimilarWebReferral traffic sources by categoryFree / PaidTraffic volume validation
Affiliate Networks (CJ, Impact)Active publishers in a programFree to joinNetwork-specific intel
Reddit / YouTube (manual)Creator affiliates, promo codesFreeMid-tail & creator affiliates
SpyFuDomains ranking for competitor branded termsPaidSEO-driven discovery

What to Do After Getting the List

Don’t just collect names — analyze and categorize them.

Divide affiliates by roughly estimated traffic tier: large-volume sites for comparison, medium-level review blogs, and small-scale niche creators. Then concentrate on those publishers who are already marketing different competitors in your industry. They are monetizing the sector and are the most open to offering another deal.

When contacting them, leading with a specific gain – higher commission rate, faster payments, a landing page that converts better, or a special promo code for their audience. Affiliates are logical. They are attracted by money.

In Conclusion

Discovering competitor affiliates allows you to achieve in a few days what partner recruitment usually takes months to do. They have done the tough job of vetting and onboarding these publishers. You just need to offer them a better deal.

Use free ways first – Google operators and network browsing can get you 60% of the way at zero cost. Add one paid tool like Ahrefs for the prioritized outreach list. Then work the list systematically.

Building an affiliate channel the fastest way is not to start from scratch but to borrow a shortcut from someone who has already built ​‍​‌‍​‍‌​‍​‌‍​‍‌it.

Picture of Avi<br><span>Writer for ReachEffect</span>

Avi
Writer for ReachEffect

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is it legal to try recruiting your competitor's affiliates? +

Yes, it is. Affiliates are independent publishers and as such, they are not bound by any exclusivity. They can promote different brands at the same time, and in fact, most of them already do.

What is the quickest free way? +

Using Google search operators. For example, a quick search for "competitor.com/?ref=" will take you less than five minutes and instantly show you the indexed affiliate content.

Am I required to use a paid tool? +

There is no need for that initially. Free methods like Google operators, network browsing, Reddit/YouTube already reveal most of the affiliates. Paid tools such as Ahrefs only make the process faster, better organized, and more focused — they become a good investment when you decide to ramp up your outreach efforts.

What if my competitor's affiliate program is private? +

You will still be able to find their affiliates, however, you won't be able to access the commission rates. Whether the program is public or private, publishers generally continue to make their presence known through their content, links, and discount codes.

How frequently do I have to carry out this analysis? +

At the very least, every quarter. Affiliate line-ups change so often. New publishers come onto the scene, others become inactive, and your competitors are always on the lookout for new partners. So, keeping your outreach pipeline continually filled means that you have to be getting new intelligence every 90 ​‍​‌‍​‍‌​‍​‌‍​‍‌days.