Corrections policy
Last updated
WorkFree helps people make money decisions, so a wrong number or an outdated rule is not a small thing. We take accuracy seriously and we fix mistakes openly. Here is how that works.
How to report an error
If you spot a mistake, a wrong figure, a broken formula, an outdated rule, a dead link, or anything that reads as inaccurate, please tell us through the contact page. Include the page name or link and, if you can, what you believe is wrong and why. Specific reports are the fastest to act on, and they genuinely help; reader corrections are one of the best ways we catch things.
How quickly we fix things
We review every correction report. Once we have confirmed an error, we fix it promptly. Clear factual mistakes and broken links are usually corrected quickly; issues that need research, for example a rule that varies by country, may take a little longer to verify before we change anything, because we would rather be right than fast.
How we mark updates
- Minor fixes such as typos, broken links, or small clarifications are corrected without a formal note.
- Material corrections that change the meaning or a figure are made, and the page's last-updated date is revised to reflect the change.
- Routine updates as costs, rules, and best practice move are reflected in the last-updated date on each guide, so you can see when a page was last checked.
What we do not change quietly
We do not alter the substance of a page to suit an advertiser or to hide an earlier mistake. Our independence is covered in the advertising disclosure, and our broader standards for how content is written and reviewed are in the editorial policy. Where we got something wrong, the honest thing is to fix it and move on, which is exactly what we aim to do.
A note on scope
WorkFree is educational and currency-agnostic, and many topics, especially benefits, tax, and employment law, vary by country and change over time. We describe rules in general terms and tell you to verify the specifics, so some "errors" are really cases where your local rule differs from the general picture. We are still glad to hear about those, because they help us make the country-specific guidance clearer.