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Corrections Policy

Last updated: May 11, 2026

We take data accuracy seriously. Insurance pricing changes frequently, public datasets are revised, and editorial content can contain mistakes. If something on InsuranceCostCity is wrong, we want to fix it.

How to Report an Error

Email data@insurancecostcity.com with the following information so we can investigate efficiently:

• The full URL of the page in question
• The specific data point or statement you believe is wrong
• Your source for the corrected value, with a link if possible
• Any additional context that would help us evaluate the issue

You do not need to include personal information beyond your email address. We will reply to confirm receipt and let you know what we find.

Types of Corrections We Make

Factual corrections. A number, name, statute reference, date, or claim that is stated incorrectly. These are the highest priority and are corrected on the page as soon as we can verify the issue. We update the "Last updated" date.

Data-refresh updates. Our state and modeled city data is refreshed periodically as new industry sources publish updated averages. A page that was accurate as of a previous data review may show a different number after a refresh. These are routine updates, not corrections of an error.

Pricing-model adjustments. Our calculators apply modeled assumptions to produce estimates. If we improve a model — for example, by incorporating a new factor or correcting a coefficient — we treat that as a model update rather than a factual correction. We may note the change on the page or in our methodology.

Editorial revisions. Wording, framing, or analytical changes we make to improve clarity or to reflect a change in the underlying topic. These are not error corrections.

What We Do When We Make a Correction

For a factual correction, we typically do the following:

• Update the affected page with the correct information
• Update the "Last updated" date on the page
• For substantive corrections, add a note describing what was changed and when

For routine data refreshes, we update the page and the underlying dataset; we do not generally annotate each refresh, but the page reflects the most current available data at the time of review.

Disputed Items

If our review finds that the existing value is supported by our sources and the suggested correction is not, we will explain why and link to the source we relied on. We are always willing to look at additional evidence.

Response Time

We try to acknowledge correction reports within two business days. Investigation can take longer when it requires consulting multiple sources or contacting a regulator.

Related Policies

Editorial Policy · Data Methodology · Disclaimer