Trust & Policies
Corrections Policy
Money content has to be accurate, and rules change. This page explains how errors are reported, reviewed, and fixed — and how articles are kept current when tax rules, rates, or regulations change.
Last updated: June 2026
Reporting an error
If you spot a factual mistake — an outdated tax rate, a wrong limit, a broken link, a miscalculation, or anything that reads as inaccurate — please report it. Email [email protected] with the subject line Correction, and include:
- The exact article URL
- The specific line, figure, or claim you believe is wrong
- What it should say, and a source if you have one (e.g. an RBI, SEBI, or Income-Tax Department page)
You can also raise a correction via the contact page. Correction reports are prioritised over general feedback.
What counts as a correction
Corrections are made for issues that affect accuracy or safety, including:
- Factual errors — wrong figures, dates, names, definitions, or calculations.
- Outdated rules and rates — tax slabs, deduction limits, interest rates, contribution caps, or regulatory thresholds that have since changed.
- Broken or wrong links — including links to official sources.
- Misleading phrasing — wording that could be read as a guarantee, a promise of returns, or personal advice when none is intended.
Differences of opinion, preferred strategies, or requests to add promotional links are not corrections and are handled as ordinary feedback.
How corrections are reviewed
Every reported error is read personally. Where the issue concerns a rule, rate, or regulation, it is checked against the relevant primary source — the Income-Tax Department, the Reserve Bank of India, SEBI, EPFO, the GST portal, or the equivalent official authority — before any change is made. Corrections are not made on the basis of a single unverified claim.
How quickly errors are fixed
- Serious errors (a wrong figure or rule that could lead a reader to a costly decision) are corrected as a priority, typically within a few business days of being verified.
- Minor errors (typos, formatting, a stale link) are batched and fixed in the next regular update of the article.
How changes are handled
When an article is materially updated, its “Updated” date is changed so you can see it has been revised. Small typo or link fixes may be made without changing the date. Articles that depend on the financial year — tax slabs, deduction limits, deadlines — are reviewed and updated when the rules change, usually around the Union Budget and the start of a new financial year.
Education, not advice
Everything published here is general educational content, not personal financial, investment, tax, or legal advice. This corrections process keeps the general information accurate; it does not turn any article into guidance for your specific situation. For decisions that depend on your full circumstances, consult a qualified professional. See the disclaimer and editorial policy for the full standard this site is held to.