- The Advertising Regulatory Board found that a debt review ranking site falsely presented itself as independent while secretly promoting Debt Experts.
- Claims of “comprehensive research” and “evaluation of over 200 firms” were ruled misleading and unsupported by evidence.
- ARB instructed its members not to publish similar rankings without clear disclosure and proper substantiation.
For thousands of South Africans seeking relief from debt, online comparison sites often appear to offer clarity in a complex market. However, the Advertising Regulatory Board (ARB) ruled that one such platform had crossed a critical ethical line by disguising advertising as independent research.
In a ruling against Debt Experts (Pty) Ltd, the ARB upheld a consumer complaint over a website titled “Top 5 Best Debt Review Companies in South Africa for 2025”, finding that it misled the public by falsely portraying itself as an objective ranking service while secretly promoting its own services.
“The website presents itself as an independent, research-based ranking platform,” the Directorate said, pointing to claims of “comprehensive research”, “thorough analysis and evaluation”, and an “evaluation of over 200 debt counselling firms”. But those assurances, the watchdog concluded, created “a clear impression of independence and objectivity” that was not supported by any evidence.
When advertising hides behind research
At the centre of the complaint was the fact that the website ranked Debt Experts first, describing it as “South Africa’s top-rated debt counsellors” and directing consumers to its services through prominent “visit website” buttons and lead-generation forms.
Although Debt Experts denied owning the domain, it admitted to having “monitoring access” to the site. The ARB found this explanation deeply unsatisfactory.
“No explanation is provided as to what this access entails, nor why the advertiser would have any access at all to a website which is seemingly independent,” the ruling noted, adding that the company’s attempt to deny responsibility while defending the promotional content revealed a fundamental inconsistency.
A forensic technical report submitted by the complainant identified a shared Google Tag Manager ID between the ranking site and domains linked to Debt Experts. While the Directorate declined to make detailed technical findings, it accepted that the shared identifier was “a strong indicator of common administration or operational control”.
“Such a linkage suggests that the ranking platform may not be an independent third-party evaluator but rather part of a coordinated digital marketing strategy,” the report stated, a conclusion the ARB found persuasive.
The duty to disclose commercial interests
One of the most serious findings concerned the site’s failure to disclose its commercial relationship with the company it ranked first.
“The absence of disclosure in circumstances where the website purports to be independent is likely to mislead consumers regarding the source and impartiality of the rankings,” the Directorate said.
The ARB rejected the argument that comparison websites are exempt from advertising disclosure rules, stressing that transparency becomes mandatory when rankings benefit the operator.
“Where a comparison site is operated by, or for the benefit of, one or more of the entities it ranks, the commercial interest must be transparent,” the ruling held.
In this case, the watchdog concluded that the website was “not clearly distinguishable as advertising”, and that the lack of disclosure “contravenes Clause 12 of the Code”.
This is not puffery
Debt Experts attempted to defend the rankings as subjective opinions and permissible puffery. The ARB was unmoved.
“Claims of ‘comprehensive research’ and ‘evaluation of over 200 firms’ go beyond subjective opinion,” the Directorate said. “They would lead an ordinary consumer to believe that the rankings are based on a systematic, independent assessment.”
The ruling went further, drawing a clear line between marketing language and factual representation. “Once an advertiser claims an objective basis for a ranking, the claim must be capable of substantiation,” the Directorate said, adding bluntly that “the material does not constitute permissible puffery”.
Because no methodology, data, or verification was provided, the ARB found that the claims were misleading and amounted to an abuse of consumer trust. “In the absence of evidence, the claims are misleading and exploit consumer trust,” the ruling stated.
Consumer activism affirmed
Although Debt Experts is not a member of the ARB, the Directorate confirmed that it was entitled to consider the matter for the guidance of its members, relying on provisions in the ARB’s founding documents and authority from the Supreme Court of Appeal.
The watchdog also rejected suggestions that the complainant’s motives undermined the case, reaffirming the right of ordinary consumers to act in the public interest.
“There is no requirement in the Code for consumers to have purchased a product or service prior to lodging a complaint,” the Directorate said. “Any consumer who has a legitimate belief that an advertisement is in contravention of the Code is entitled to lodge a formal complaint.”
A warning to digital marketers
In its conclusion, the ARB found that the website breached multiple provisions of the Code, including honesty, misleading claims, identification of advertising, and research-based comparative claims.
“The Directorate finds that the website constitutes advertising and that it is misleading in its presentation of independence, research methodology and ranking criteria,” the ruling said.
ARB members were instructed not to accept or publish any advertising for Debt Experts that presents rankings, comparisons, endorsements, or Top 5-style lists without “clear and prominent disclosure” of commercial involvement.
They were also warned against publishing claims of “comprehensive research” or “thorough analysis” without proper substantiation.
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