Coupon Verification Methodology
Ginja Deals uses a practical verification workflow for coupons, promo codes, sale notes, and store pages. The goal is to make each offer easier to evaluate before a shopper leaves for the retailer.
Verification Signals We Use
- Merchant landing pages and publicly visible terms.
- Affiliate-network offer records and expiration dates when available.
- Checkout or cart evidence when a controlled check is possible.
- Recent user reports, vote data, and publisher notes.
- Manual review of wording, exclusions, dates, product scope, and eligibility rules.
How Labels Should Be Read
A coupon may be marked current, reported, expired, needs recheck, or verified depending on the available evidence. A code should not be treated as guaranteed until the retailer confirms the discount in the final cart or checkout flow.
Why Codes Can Fail
- Expiration dates or limited redemption windows.
- New-customer, app-only, location, plan, or product exclusions.
- Minimum order values, subscription terms, or bundle restrictions.
- One-code-per-order limits or account-specific targeting.
- Retailer-side changes after publication.
Reader Feedback
Reader reports help us find stale offers. When reporting a code, include the code, merchant, page URL, date tested, cart details, and any error message shown by the retailer.
Last updated: July 17, 2026.
Verification Notes Readers Should Expect
Eligible coupon and deal pages should include the merchant or source link, the last checked date when available, key restrictions, and a plain-language note explaining how to use the offer.
If a promotion is affiliate sourced, Ginja Deals still aims to describe the public-facing terms in reader-first language before sending visitors to the merchant.
