Corrections Policy
TravelWake treats material errors and material updates as editorial work, not housekeeping.
Travel information can age quickly, and small factual mistakes can change a reader's decision more than stylistic flaws ever will. This page explains how TravelWake approaches corrections, clarifications, and substantive updates.
The goal is simple: if an error matters to the reader, it should matter to the page.
TravelWake accepts reader correction requests and wants them to include the exact page URL and disputed detail.
If a change alters the substance of the advice, the page should be revised and its last-updated date should move.
Routine copy cleanup may happen quietly, but factual and decision-shaping issues are treated as editorial corrections.
What counts as a correction
TravelWake distinguishes between routine cleanup and real editorial correction. A typo, formatting issue, or minor rewrite may be handled without special note. A factual issue that changes the meaning, confidence, or usefulness of the advice should be treated differently.
That includes errors around safety framing, route practicality, destination facts, pricing logic, entry friction, or anything else that could materially affect a reader's plan.
How to send a correction request
The best correction requests include three things: the exact page URL, the specific line or claim that looks wrong, and the source or context that supports the objection.
Send those details to travelwake@gmail.com. If the issue concerns a deadline-sensitive topic, such as safety conditions or access rules, say that clearly in the message.
How TravelWake handles material updates
If a revision materially changes the advice or framing of a page, TravelWake should update the page itself and move the last-updated date so readers are not looking at old framing disguised as current guidance.
When clarity warrants it, TravelWake may also add a note explaining that a substantive change was made. The exact format can vary, but the principle stays the same: meaningful changes should not be hidden by default. That standard matters whether the page is helping someone protect a modest trip budget or a more complex, high-value journey.
Where this policy fits
This page is part of a wider trust system rather than a standalone formality. The broader editorial rule set lives on Editorial Standards, while the process behind key TravelWake products is documented on Methodology.
Together, those pages make it easier to judge not only whether a page is useful, but whether TravelWake is behaving responsibly when that usefulness needs maintenance.