Corrections& updates
When we get something wrong, we fix it visibly, not silently. Here is how that works, when it happens, and how to tell us if you find something.
Last reviewed: April 22, 2026
Our correction commitment
Seasoned RV publishes research-grade editorial content. That means we will, over time, publish things that turn out to be wrong — because 2026 data changes, because a source was wrong, because we made a math error, or because we misread a regulation. The question is not whether errors will happen. The question is what happens when they do.
Our operating rule is transparency: corrections are visible, not silent. The original error stays documented (via strikethrough or a footnote) so readers who bookmarked or shared the original can see what changed. We tell you what was wrong, when we corrected it, and why.
How to report an error
Three channels, all of which land in the same inbox:
- Email: 639mediaone@gmail.com with “Correction” in the subject line and the article URL in the body. Reply within 48 hours.
- Contact form: seasonedrv.com/contact with “Factual correction” selected as the topic.
- In-article flag:if you’re reading on desktop, every article has a “Flag this article” link in the footer of the sources section.
If the issue involves a legal or safety concern (defamation, trademark, an unsafe product recommendation, a dosage error, a financial-claim misstep), flag it as “Legal/Safety” in the subject line. Those are triaged to the top of the queue.
Our correction timeline
Factual errors — 24 hours
A date, a price, a specification, a citation that’s wrong. These are corrected within 24 hours of verification by our team. The correction appears at the end of the article with the date, the specific change, and the sourcing that triggered the update. The original text is preserved via strikethrough where appropriate.
Legal or safety errors — same day
A defamatory claim, an unsafe procedure, an income guarantee, a medical or financial statement presented as authoritative. These are corrected on the day we verify the issue — usually within a few hours. If the correction requires legal review, the original piece is temporarily un-published (not silent-deleted — redirected to a notice page) while review happens. The article returns with visible correction notes.
Stale data — quarterly review
Articles containing 2026 market data are reviewed every 90 days. Articles whose claims have materially changed (insurance rate rounds, regulatory shifts, significant manufacturer changes) are updated with fresh data, with the “Last verified” date incremented. Articles whose claims are still current pass review with the date updated and no body change.
Methodology changes — flagged on affected articles
When we change how we calculate or source something — a new insurance data provider, a different fuel-economy methodology, an updated pillar-rating rubric — we update our Methodology page and flag every affected article with a visible methodology-note banner linking to the change.
What a visible correction looks like
A corrected article retains:
- Original publication date (unchanged)
- Last-verified date (updated to correction date)
- A corrections section appended to the article body, listing each correction with date, what changed, and why
- Inline strikethroughs or footnotes where the text changed materially
- A link to the archived original (for substantial rewrites)
Readers can see, at any time, what changed and when. That’s the accountability commitment.
What we do not do
- We do not silently edit articles to make past claims match present facts
- We do not memory-hole articles that contain errors — the article stays at its URL with the correction visible
- We do not dismiss correction reportswithout a response, even when we disagree with the reporter’s characterization
- We do not accept corrections from commercial parties without an independent source for the correction. If a manufacturer emails us about a product claim, we verify against independent sources before updating.
Correction archive
We maintain an archive of material corrections (errors that changed the factual content of an article, not cosmetic fixes) at this page below. The archive is searchable by article URL and correction date.
Why transparency matters
Seasoned RV’s audience makes real financial decisions based on our content — what RV to buy, what insurance to carry, where to park for a winter, what tools to own. Getting it right is our primary job. When we fall short of that, the response can’t be quiet-fix and hope nobody noticed. It has to be visible correction with a paper trail, because that’s what trust looks like over a 10-year horizon.
The goal is not zero errors. The goal is zero hidden errors.