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Monday, June 16, 2025

My Domain Is Verified — Why Is Facebook Still Rejecting My Affiliate Links?

 Verifying your domain with Facebook is a crucial step in securing your online presence and unlocking various advertising features. However, it can be frustrating when, even after successful verification, Facebook continues to reject your affiliate links. Many marketers, bloggers, and business owners face this issue, often confused about the disconnect between domain ownership and Facebook’s link-sharing policies.

If your domain is verified but your affiliate links are still being blocked, restricted, or flagged by Facebook, the issue likely lies in other compliance factors beyond domain ownership. In this blog, we explore the top reasons why Facebook may reject your affiliate links, even after verification, and provide actionable steps you can take to resolve the issue.


Understanding the Difference: Domain Verification vs. Link Approval

Before diving into the causes and solutions, it's important to understand a critical distinction:

  • Domain verification proves you own and manage a website. It allows you to configure tracking events, claim content rights, and customize link previews.

  • Affiliate link approval is an entirely separate issue. Facebook enforces strict rules on link safety, content quality, and ad policy compliance. Just because your domain is verified doesn’t automatically mean any link associated with it—especially third-party affiliate links—will be accepted.

Think of domain verification as opening the door, but link approval is about what you’re bringing inside.


Common Reasons Facebook Rejects Verified Affiliate Links

1. Affiliate Network Is Blacklisted

Facebook maintains a hidden database of blacklisted domains and affiliate networks. These are often flagged due to:

  • Spam complaints

  • User deception

  • Repeated policy violations

  • Promoting misleading or exaggerated claims

If your affiliate link redirects to a blacklisted URL—even through a shortener or redirect—it will be automatically rejected.

Solution:
Use reputable affiliate programs like Amazon Associates, ShareASale, Impact, or Rakuten. Avoid programs with spammy landing pages or those commonly associated with MLM schemes or “get-rich-quick” pitches.


2. You’re Linking to a Non-Approved Domain

Even if your own domain is verified, the final destination (where the link redirects) must also comply with Facebook's community and ad standards. Facebook follows the trail of every link click, and if it ends at a domain that’s flagged or unverified, your post or ad may be disapproved.

Example:
You share a link like yourdomain.com/go/offer that redirects to clickbankproduct.com/landing. If ClickBank or that particular domain has been flagged, the whole link chain may be rejected.

Solution:
Host all affiliate content (e.g. reviews, guides, product pages) directly on your domain. Avoid “raw” affiliate links. Instead of linking directly to the affiliate offer, create helpful, original content that naturally includes affiliate links embedded within the context of your verified site.


3. Link Cloaking or Redirection Is Overused or Suspicious

If your site heavily cloaks or redirects affiliate URLs to disguise their destination, Facebook’s systems may interpret it as deceptive behavior. This is common when marketers try to hide an affiliate relationship or mimic a native domain path.

Solution:
Use transparent links. If you must cloak links (for branding), use only clean redirects and disclose affiliate relationships. Avoid multiple redirections and always ensure that the final landing page loads correctly and quickly.


4. Policy Violations on the Landing Page

Facebook reviews not just the post or ad but also the destination page. If your landing page contains:

  • Misleading claims (“Earn $1,000 in a week!”)

  • Restricted content (e.g., CBD, adult products, crypto scams)

  • Poor-quality design (too many pop-ups, aggressive CTAs)

  • Unsubstantiated testimonials or before/after results

…it will violate Facebook’s Ad Policies and Community Standards, resulting in rejections.

Solution:
Read and follow Meta’s advertising policies. Ensure your landing pages are clean, clear, informative, and transparent. Avoid exaggerated promises or manipulative wording.


5. User Experience Issues: Slow, Broken, or Mobile-Unfriendly Pages

If your affiliate landing page is:

  • Slow to load (especially on mobile)

  • Riddled with JavaScript errors or broken images

  • Not optimized for mobile devices

…it may be flagged under Facebook’s poor user experience policy.

Solution:
Use tools like Google PageSpeed Insights or GTMetrix to test page performance. Ensure mobile responsiveness, fast load times, and clear site structure.


6. Lack of Transparent Disclosures

Facebook values honesty and user trust. If you promote affiliate products without disclosing your relationship, it can trigger disapproval or lower trust scores on your domain.

Solution:
Clearly state when a link is an affiliate link, especially on landing pages. Use statements like:

“Some of the links in this post are affiliate links. If you click and purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.”

This is not just Facebook policy-friendly—it’s also legally required by the FTC.


7. You’re Posting in the Wrong Context (e.g., Groups or Comments)

Even if your affiliate link works in a personal post, Facebook may restrict you from sharing it in:

  • Groups where affiliate marketing is not allowed

  • Comments where links are often flagged as spam

  • Messenger conversations, which have stricter filtering

Solution:
Check group rules before posting affiliate links. Avoid link-dropping in comments. If you want to share offers in groups, post your blog article (on your verified domain), not the affiliate link itself.


8. Your Facebook Account or Page Has Low Trust or Poor History

Facebook uses reputation signals. If your Page, profile, or ad account has:

  • A history of policy violations

  • Repeated disapprovals

  • Low engagement and poor feedback

…your links may be rejected more aggressively than those from trusted sources.

Solution:
Build a clean Facebook presence. Maintain quality engagement, run compliant ads, and avoid sketchy marketing tactics. Over time, your reputation score can improve, reducing automatic disapprovals.


9. Facebook’s Automated Systems Are Over-Filtering

Sometimes, Facebook’s algorithms overcorrect. Even a clean, verified link may get caught in automated spam filters.

Solution:

  • Request a manual review. After a disapproval, look for the “Request Review” button and explain your case clearly.

  • Contact Facebook Business Support if the issue persists and you’re an advertiser.

Avoid resubmitting repeatedly without making changes, as this can lead to further restrictions.


Best Practices to Get Affiliate Links Approved on Facebook

1. Always Use Content as a Bridge

Instead of sharing affiliate links directly:

  • Write an article, product review, tutorial, or comparison on your website

  • Include your affiliate links contextually

  • Share that blog post on Facebook instead

This not only helps with compliance but builds trust and encourages conversions.

2. Use Facebook’s Sharing Debugger

Test your link using the Facebook Sharing Debugger. It shows how your content appears when shared and flags issues that could block the link.

3. Keep Your Website Clean and Professional

A good website with clear menus, privacy policy, contact page, and branding gives Facebook confidence that you're a legitimate content creator, not a spammer.

4. Avoid URL Shorteners on Facebook

Facebook often treats URL shorteners like Bit.ly or TinyURL as suspicious. Share the full link or use branded redirects hosted on your domain.

5. Follow Facebook’s Commerce and Ads Guidelines

Review both the Commerce Policies and Ads Policies regularly. They’re updated frequently, and ignorance won’t protect your content from being restricted.


What to Do If Rejection Persists

Even after correcting all the above, if Facebook still rejects your links:

  1. Appeal the decision with evidence that your link and content are safe.

  2. Use Facebook Ads Manager to create a compliant ad that links to your blog or landing page.

  3. Try Facebook Business Support, especially if your account spends on ads. Verified business pages often get faster and more favorable support.

  4. Diversify your traffic sources. Don’t rely solely on Facebook. Build email lists, use SEO, and explore Pinterest or Quora for affiliate traffic.


Conclusion

Verifying your domain is just the beginning. While it unlocks tools like event tracking and preview control, it doesn’t guarantee that every link you post will be accepted. Facebook’s rejection of affiliate links is typically rooted in deeper compliance issues—ranging from link destinations, landing page quality, and policy violations to redirection behavior and overall account trust.

By following Facebook’s guidelines, using ethical affiliate marketing practices, and maintaining a professional website, you can significantly reduce the chances of link rejection and ensure your promotional efforts thrive on the platform.

Take the time to optimize your site, clean your link practices, and work with trusted affiliate programs. Over time, your content will gain traction and approval not only from Facebook but from the audiences you aim to reach.

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