Commitment to corrections
MyFinanceTools publishes calculators and guides that rely on clear explanations, sensible assumptions, and accurate references. If something is wrong or likely to mislead readers, the aim is to review it and correct it where necessary.
Finance content can become outdated because tax thresholds, product rules, interest rates, and official guidance can change. The site should not leave known factual issues uncorrected once they have been identified and checked.
What users can report
Users can report issues that may affect accuracy, clarity, or usefulness. This includes incorrect figures, unclear wording, broken links, outdated references, calculator assumption concerns, or examples that no longer reflect the current UK position.
Reports are most useful when they include the page URL, a short explanation of the issue, and a link to any official or reliable source that supports the correction.
How reported issues are reviewed
Reported issues are checked against the page itself and, where relevant, against official or reputable sources. For UK tax or government rules, this may include GOV.UK or HMRC. For regulated finance topics, this may include the FCA, MoneyHelper, or other suitable references.
Not every report will lead to a change. Some issues may be matters of wording, interpretation, or personal circumstances. Where a calculator is intentionally simplified, the more appropriate fix may be to clarify the assumption rather than change the calculation.
Material corrections
A material correction is a change that could affect a reader's understanding of a calculation, a rule, a threshold, or a practical next step. Examples include a wrong tax threshold, a misleading calculator assumption, or a statement that no longer reflects current official guidance.
When a material issue is confirmed, the page should be corrected as clearly as possible. Where useful, the page may also show an updated or reviewed date so readers can see that the content has been checked again.
Minor wording fixes
Minor edits may include spelling corrections, clearer phrasing, improved formatting, or fixing a link label where the meaning of the page is not materially changed. These changes may be made without a separate correction note.
The aim is to keep pages readable and accurate without making the site overly formal or difficult to maintain.
Finance rules and changing thresholds
UK finance rules, tax thresholds, lender criteria, and official guidance can change. A calculator may still be useful as an estimate, but that does not mean every figure will remain current forever.
For important financial decisions, users should verify the latest position with the relevant official source, lender, provider, HMRC, GOV.UK, or an FCA-regulated adviser where appropriate. MyFinanceTools provides general education and estimates, not personalised financial advice.
How to contact the site
To report a possible correction, email contact@myfinancetools.co.uk. Include the page URL, the issue you have found, and any source that helps verify the correction.