We Tested 100 Promo Codes – Real Success Rate Data
Promo Code Network independently tested 100 randomly selected promo codes pulled from popular aggregator sites. Here is what actually worked, what failed and why.
- Of 100 randomly tested promo codes, 27 actually worked as advertised.
- 41 codes were expired but still listed publicly.
- 14 were geo-restricted to regions not disclosed by the aggregator.
- 10 had been silently replaced by the brand with new codes.
- 8 codes appeared to be fabricated and could not be traced to any brand-issued source.
Methodology
Between April and May 2026 we pulled 100 promo codes at random from the top 5 coupon aggregator sites by Google ranking. Codes covered crypto exchanges, VPN services, web hosting, trading platforms and general retail. For each code we attempted to use it under realistic conditions – a fresh account, a real purchase or trade flow, the exchange or service’s standard checkout. We documented the result, the failure mode if applicable and the date of testing.
The Headline Number: 27%
Only 27 out of 100 codes worked as advertised. That is a baseline failure rate of 73% on codes promoted to the general public. The actual conversion impact for searchers is worse, because they typically only see codes via SERP listings without verification dates.
| Result | Count | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Worked as advertised | 27 | Discount applied, account credit visible |
| Expired (still listed) | 41 | Aggregator did not refresh |
| Geo-restricted (not disclosed) | 14 | Valid for one region, listed as universal |
| Replaced by new code | 10 | Brand silently rotated, old code remained scraped |
| Fabricated | 8 | No traceable brand-issued source |
Why So Many Codes Fail
1. Aggregator Sites Do Not Verify
The dominant business model for coupon aggregator sites is to scrape codes from anywhere they appear – email forwards, Reddit threads, brand newsletters, other aggregators – and publish them with the highest possible search volume targeting. Verification is expensive (it requires actually completing a purchase flow), and unverified codes generate the same ad revenue as verified ones.
2. Brands Rotate Codes Silently
Most brands rotate promo codes on a monthly or quarterly cadence. They rarely announce expirations publicly. Aggregators that scraped the code three months ago have no signal that it is no longer active until users complain.
3. Geo-Restrictions Are Standard but Hidden
Affiliate programs frequently issue different codes for different regions. A US affiliate gets code US-CODE-2026 paying 20%, an EU affiliate gets EU-CODE-2026 paying 15%. These codes typically reject if used outside the issuing region, but the aggregator does not show the region context.
How to Spot a Likely-Failed Code Before You Use It
- No test date visible: if the site listing the code does not show when it was last verified, assume it has not been tested recently.
- Listed on more than 5 aggregator sites identically: this is the scrape signature. Original brand codes typically appear in 1-2 places before being scraped widely.
- Discount looks too high: 90% off or “lifetime free” codes are almost always fabricated.
- Requires unusual setup: codes that demand an account creation through a specific click path before they apply are often phishing.
- No brand mention of the code on social media or in emails: brand-issued codes are usually announced somewhere.
What This Means for Searchers
The promo code industry’s economics reward volume over accuracy. The largest aggregator sites that dominate search rankings have the worst measured success rates in our test sample because they prioritize keyword coverage over verification. Independent publishers that test before publication are smaller but yield dramatically higher hit rates – in our internal log, 91% of currently active codes work on first attempt.