Corrections Policy
Last updated: June 21, 2026
We work hard to be accurate, but no publisher is perfect. This Corrections Policy explains how to tell us about a mistake, how we review it, and how we fix it. It reflects our belief that the fastest way to stay trustworthy is to correct errors quickly and openly.
How to report an error
If you believe something on the Site is inaccurate, out of date, or unclear, please let us know. Email us at hello@moneymastersmedia.com or use our contact page. To help us act quickly, it is useful to include:
- The page title or link where you saw the issue.
- The specific statement, figure, or section you believe is wrong.
- What you believe the correct information is, and a source if you have one.
How we review reports
Our editorial team reviews every report we receive. We check the claim against reputable sources, decide whether a change is needed, and act on it. We aim to acknowledge clear factual errors promptly and to resolve them as quickly as we reasonably can, with the most time-sensitive issues handled first.
Updates versus corrections
Not every change is a correction. We treat them in two ways:
- Routine updates. Markets, rates, rules, and figures change over time. Refreshing a page to reflect current conditions, or improving wording for clarity, is a normal update. Many pages show a visible last-reviewed or last-updated date so you can see when this happened.
- Corrections. When a page contained a genuine factual error, we fix the error itself. For a significant mistake that could have misled readers, we aim to make the change clear rather than quietly swapping it.
How significant corrections are handled
For a material factual error, our goal is transparency: we fix the page and, where it helps readers understand what changed, we note that a correction was made and when. Minor fixes such as typos, formatting, or small clarifications are generally made without a separate note.
A note on educational content and forecasts
Much of our content is educational, and our calculators produce hypothetical illustrations based on the assumptions you enter, not predictions. A market moving differently from an example, or a projection not matching real life, is not an error in itself. Corrections apply to factual mistakes, such as a wrong figure, an outdated rule, a broken calculation, or a misstatement, not to the ordinary uncertainty of markets. For more on how our content is created, see our editorial policy and methodology.
Contact
To report an error or ask about a correction, email us at hello@moneymastersmedia.com. We read every message and appreciate readers who help us get things right.
