The Short Answer
We treat corrections as a normal, expected part of careful publishing. When something on this site is wrong, unclear, or out of date, we fix it, and we mark significant changes openly. If you spot an error, you can flag it through our published contact page, and we'll review it.
MassageChairsTested.com is an independent, editorial buying guide. We don't sell chairs, and we're not a store. That independence only matters if our guidance is accurate — and accuracy means admitting when we get something wrong and fixing it promptly. This page explains how we handle mistakes, how we keep guidance current, and how you can help.
Why corrections matter on a buying guide
Massage chairs, retailers, warranty terms, and showroom practices all change over time. A model that was widely available last year may be discontinued. A feature that was unusual may become common. Standards for what counts as a trustworthy showroom or a fair return policy can shift too. Because our pages are meant to be used during a real purchase decision, an out-of-date or inaccurate detail isn't just untidy — it can send a reader down the wrong path. So we'd rather correct openly than quietly hope no one notices.
Our broader commitments to accuracy, sourcing, and independence live in our editorial standards , and this correction policy is the practical mechanism that backs them up.
What we treat as a correction
Not every edit is a "correction." We make small refinements constantly — tightening wording, improving examples, adding a helpful link. We reserve the word correction for changes that affect the meaning or accuracy of our guidance. In practice we sort changes into three buckets:
| Type of change | What it covers | How it's handled |
|---|---|---|
| Routine update | Refreshing details as products, retailers, or standards change; clarifying wording; adding context. | Made as needed; reflected in the page's last-updated date. |
| Minor correction | A small factual slip — a typo in a number, a mislabeled feature, a broken link — that doesn't change the overall advice. | Fixed directly; noted if a reader could have been misled. |
| Significant correction | An error that changed the substance of our guidance or could have affected a reader's decision. | Fixed and clearly noted on the page, with a brief description of what changed. |
How we note significant corrections
When we make a significant correction, we don't pretend the earlier version never existed. We update the affected text and add a short, plain-English note explaining what was wrong and what we changed. The aim is simple: a reader who relied on the old version should be able to understand what shifted and why. Minor fixes — a typo, a dead link — usually don't get a visible note, unless the mistake could reasonably have misled someone, in which case we err toward transparency.
We also keep our last-updated dates honest. When you see a recent date on a page, it reflects a genuine review or change, not a cosmetic refresh designed to look current.
Key Takeaways
- We fix errors promptly and treat corrections as normal, not embarrassing.
- Significant corrections are noted openly so you can see what changed.
- Routine updates keep guidance current as products, retailers, and standards evolve.
- Reader-flagged errors are welcome — you can report them through our contact page.
- Our last-updated dates reflect real reviews, not cosmetic edits.
How to report an error
Reader feedback is one of the best ways we catch mistakes. If you find something that looks wrong — a factual error, an outdated detail, a confusing explanation, or a broken link — please tell us. The most helpful reports name the specific page, point to the exact sentence or claim, and explain what you believe is inaccurate. If you can share a source, even better.
To flag an issue, contact us via our published contact page. We read what comes in, look into credible reports, and update the page if a correction is warranted. We can't promise a personal reply to every message, but we take accuracy seriously and genuinely value the help.
What we won't do
A correction policy is also a promise about limits. We don't change guidance because a brand or retailer would prefer a friendlier description, and we don't quietly soften honest criticism under pressure. Our independence is described in our disclosure , and the way we evaluate showrooms and reviews is set out in our showroom verification methodology and our guide to reading massage chair reviews critically . Corrections are about getting facts right — not about who's asking.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I report a mistake on a page?
Reach us through our published contact page. The most useful reports name the exact page and sentence, explain what you think is inaccurate, and include a source if you have one. We review credible reports and update the page when a correction is warranted, though we can't reply to every message individually.
Will I see when a page has been corrected?
For significant corrections, yes. We add a short, plain-English note describing what changed, and we update the page's last-updated date. Minor fixes like typos or broken links usually aren't flagged unless the error could reasonably have misled a reader, in which case we note it too.
What's the difference between an update and a correction?
An update keeps guidance current as products, retailers, or standards change, or simply improves clarity. A correction fixes something that was inaccurate. Updates happen routinely; corrections address factual errors. Significant corrections are noted openly, while routine updates are reflected in the page's last-updated date.
Do you correct pages if a brand or retailer complains?
We correct genuine factual errors, no matter who points them out. But we don't change honest assessments because a brand or retailer prefers a friendlier description. Corrections are about accuracy, not pressure. Our independence and how we handle relationships are described in our disclosure and editorial standards.
Before You Buy
Accuracy is the whole point
Use our guidance with confidence, knowing we fix what we get wrong — and start your decision with a calm, structured checklist.
Last updated: June 2026 · Editorial standards · Disclosure