Compare · Consumer electronics
Who reviews consumer electronics, and can you trust them?
Gadgets and gear, where hands-on testing actually exists. Here is every review site we track in this category, graded head to head.
| Grade | Review site | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | A+ | Grades: the products it buys and lab-tests The benchmark. Buys what it tests, takes no ads, answers to members. |
| 2 | A+ | Grades: its comparative product-test rankings A government-founded but ad-free German foundation that buys products anonymously and lab-tests them; it sells a seal to winners but, by its own rules, the seal is earned before it can be licensed. |
| 3 | A+ | Grades: its lab-tested product ratings for Australia A member-funded nonprofit that buys products at retail and tests them in its own accredited labs — about as close to unbuyable as consumer reviews get. |
| 4 | A+ | Grades: its lab-tested laptop and phone reviews A lab-driven laptop and gadget reviewer that publishes its own measurements and method; it earns affiliate commissions and ad revenue, but rankings come from in-house testing, not paid placement. |
| 5 | A | Grades: its lab-benchmarked PC-component reviews An in-house lab that benchmarks PC hardware hands-on and says it won't sell reviews; just know the buy buttons earn it affiliate commissions. |
| 6 | A | Grades: its lab-tested 'Best Buy' product verdicts A rare reviewer that buys and lab-tests products itself, takes no ads, and by its own disclosure keeps paid logo-licensing walled off from its ratings. |
| 7 | A | Grades: its deeply benchmarked hardware reviews A methodology gold standard for two decades: exhaustive first-hand benchmarking with published test setups and no pay-for-placement, ad- and affiliate-funded, that stopped publishing new reviews in August 2024. |
| 8 | A | Grades: its lab-tested scores for TVs, headphones, and monitors The most transparent lab testing on the web, now partly behind a paywall and wrapped in affiliate links. |
| 9 | A | Grades: its lab-tested PC and laptop reviews A staff-written tech publication that does real hands-on lab testing and publishes its method; it earns affiliate commissions on what you buy but, by its own disclosure, does not sell reviews or placement to vendors. |
| 10 | A | Grades: its lab-tested consumer-tech reviews A hands-on UK tech-review site that tests gear in its own labs and says it never takes money to review; just remember the buy-links next to each verdict earn it affiliate commissions. |
| 11 | A | Grades: its standardized phone reviews and specs A specs-and-reviews institution that tests phones hands-on in its own lab with published methods; it earns from ads and affiliate links, but by its own disclosure those don't touch the editorial reviews. |
| 12 | A | Grades: its lab-tested 'best of' product guides A genuine hands-on lab-testing operation that Gannett wound down in 2024; its picks were earned, not sold, but a 2023 disclosure lapse (by the company's own admission) and the shutdown leave a static, aging archive. |
| 13 | A | Grades: its standardized camera and lens test reviews A rare reviewer that earns its authority: in-house, hands-on camera tests against a published, reproducible studio scene, with paid content kept separate and labeled. |
| 14 | A- | Grades: its hands-on tech reviews and scores Hands-on tech journalism with real testing and disclosed affiliate links; by its own policy, commissions and ads don't dictate scores, but review depth varies by category. |
| 15 | A- | Grades: its single 'best' pick per product category Real testing behind an affiliate paywall of conflict. Good work, mixed incentives. |
| 16 | A- | Grades: its 5-star tech reviews and buying guides A long-running hands-on tech reviewer with a published testing method, but its "best of" picks ride on the same affiliate links it earns commissions from, which it discloses. |
| 17 | A- | Grades: its lab-tested reviews and 'Editors' Choice' awards Genuine lab tests up top, retailer-paid 'where to buy' links underneath. |
| 18 | B+ | Grades: Consumer electronics and fitness gear (fitness trackers, running watches, headphones, smart home devices, tools, kitchen appliances) TechGearLab's self-purchase, no-free-units policy meaningfully insulates its rankings from vendor influence, but affiliate commissions on every ranked link create a latent incentive toward commercially available products, and the proprietary scoring methodology is not published in reproducible detail. |
| 19 | B+ | Grades: its hands-on reviews and buying guides for tech Hands-on consumer-tech reviews from in-house labs that earn affiliate commissions on what they recommend, not placement fees from the brands they rank. |
| 20 | B+ | Grades: its 1-100 editor reviews of gadgets A veteran tech publication that hands-on tests gadgets with a published ethics statement, while earning affiliate commissions on the products it recommends. |
| 21 | B+ | Grades: its hands-on hi-fi and AV star ratings A genuine hands-on testing operation with real test rooms and walled-off ad sales; just remember it earns affiliate commission on the gear it rates highly, which it discloses. |
| 22 | B+ | Grades: Fitness trackers, smartwatches, and health/wellness wearables — individual product reviews and curated best-of ranking lists. A credible specialist publication with published testing methodology and an explicit editorial-commercial separation promise, but affiliate commissions, display ads, and brand-sponsored content on the same pages create the standard tensions of ad-supported tech media — readers get real hands-on testing, not an arm's-length judgment. |
| 23 | B | Grades: its star-rated reviews and 'best of' buying guides for tech Helpful buying guides built around the buy links that actually pay the bills. |
| 24 | B | Grades: its lab-tested 'Best of the Best' picks Hands-on "best of" product picks from a real Nevada testing lab, monetized through affiliate links and syndicated across Nexstar's local TV newsrooms; it says vendors can't buy placement. |
| 25 | B | Grades: its game and entertainment reviews A hands-on games and pop-culture site whose first-hand reviews are credible, but it grades creative works, not the vendors it covers, and critics warn its new owner Valnet rewards SEO clicks over depth. |
| 26 | B | Grades: its hands-on game reviews scored on 10 Hands-on staff reviews on a transparent 10-point scale, but it's an ad- and affiliate-funded outlet, and its independence was famously tested by the 2007 Gerstmann firing, which Gerstmann later said stemmed from advertiser pressure. |
| 27 | B- | Grades: its Institute lab tests and the GH Seal Real lab testing behind the reviews, but its famous Seal is, by its own program rules, tied to advertising in the magazine. |
| 28 | B- | Grades: its 'best reviewed' picks distilled from other reviews A pioneering "review of the reviews" aggregator that ranked products by reading other experts' tests rather than running its own, and now appears effectively shuttered as its parent's Ask.com sister site has closed. |
| 29 | C+ | Grades: its crowd star ratings of products and shops Australia's biggest crowd-review site: free to read, genuinely tough on fake reviews, but the brands it ranks are also the ones buying ad placement on its pages. |
| 30 | C+ | Grades: its hands-on reviews and 'best' lists for consumer tech Real tech testing, but an affiliate model and a recent AI-content credibility hit. |
| 31 | C+ | Grades: its hands-on game reviews and scores Mostly big-budget games scored above 7, with buy links that double as the business model. |
| 32 | C+ | Grades: its 'top ten' lists and buying guides A long-running "best of" buying-guide site that does real hands-on testing for some categories, but by its own disclosure earns affiliate commissions on the products it ranks. |
| 33 | C- | Grades: its consumer-review rankings of solar installers Useful consumer-review hub for solar, but it earns its money selling leads to the same installers it lists, and critics call it a lead-gen site first. |
| 34 | C- | Grades: its phone, internet, and TV provider rankings Carrier reviews from a site owned by a company that, by its own portfolio, is paid to market and generate leads for many of the carriers it ranks. |
Columns are the five rubric dimensions, scored 0-5, with each column's weight shown in its header; independence and evidence carry the most, 30% each. See the full methodology. Each row also shows a scoring-confidence chip (how sure we are of that grade) and a type tag; hover any chip for what it means.