Corrections Policy
How we handle errors on BanksForCrypto.
Reporting an error
If you spot an error — a stale APY, a wrong license jurisdiction, a broken feature claim, a misstated regulator, an outdated fee — please email [email protected]. Include the URL, the specific passage, and (ideally) a primary-source link supporting the correct claim.
You can also reach us via LinkedIn at linkedin.com/in/stephan-kulik-editorial001.
Response SLA
- Acknowledgement: within 48 hours (typically same day).
- Investigation: we verify the claim against primary sources.
- Publication: if the correction is valid, we update the page within 3 business days of verification.
- Material corrections (those that change a score, recommendation, or safety claim) are updated immediately on verification.
How corrections are published
When we correct a page, we:
- Update the affected passage in place.
- Update the page's Last updated date.
- For material corrections, add a dated correction note at the bottom of the page describing what changed.
- For corrections that affected scores or rankings, we update the structured data (Review, AggregateRating) and the home-page ranking.
- Post a brief note on LinkedIn if the correction affects a platform we currently recommend.
Correction log
Material corrections from 2026-04-20 onward are logged publicly. When we publish one, it appears here. No material corrections to date in the current log window.
Who reviews corrections
All corrections are reviewed by the editor, Stephan Kulik. For material claims with legal or regulatory implications, we consult primary-source filings (regulator registers, court documents) before publishing the correction. See the fact-checking policy for the two-person process on material claims.
Disputes
If a platform disputes our score or a stated fact, we welcome the input. We will only update the page if the dispute is backed by primary sources. Pressure from legal threats, PR requests, or advertising leverage is not a correction mechanism and will not change content. Affiliate relationships are not a correction mechanism either; see editorial guidelines.