Last updated: 2026-04-25

Jetsetter Guide is committed to publishing accurate, useful, and transparent travel coverage. When we get something wrong, we want to correct it clearly and responsibly.

Reporting an Error

If you believe an article on Jetsetter Guide contains a factual error, outdated information, missing context, or a material omission, please contact us with the article URL and a clear description of the issue.

Helpful correction requests include the specific passage in question, what you believe is inaccurate, and any supporting source or documentation that can help our editorial team review the issue.

How We Review Correction Requests

Correction requests are reviewed by our editorial team. When evaluating a request, we may review original source material, official statements, cruise line or hotel information, tourism board updates, port authority notices, public records, firsthand reporting, or other reliable sources relevant to the article.

Not every disagreement or preference results in a correction. We correct factual errors, misleading statements, outdated information that materially affects a reader’s understanding, and omissions that create an inaccurate impression.

Response Time

We aim to acknowledge correction requests within 2 business days and, when a correction is warranted, to update the article within 5 business days.

Urgent issues that may affect traveler safety, access, legal requirements, health requirements, closures, cancellations, or major trip-planning decisions are prioritized and reviewed as quickly as possible.

How We Note Corrections

Our correction practice depends on the type of change:

  • Typos, grammar, formatting, and style edits. Minor edits that do not change the meaning of an article may be fixed without a public correction note.
  • Clarifications. If an article is accurate but could be clearer, we may update the language for context, precision, or readability without treating the change as a factual correction.
  • Factual errors. If an article contains an incorrect fact, we update the article and may add a correction note explaining what changed and when.
  • Material corrections. If an error significantly affects the meaning of an article, a recommendation, or a reader’s understanding of the subject, we add a more prominent correction note within the article.
  • Substantial errors or retractions. If an article’s central claim is found to be inaccurate, we may substantially revise the article, add a correction note at the top, or replace the article with a retraction notice where appropriate.
  • Time-sensitive travel updates. When circumstances change after publication, such as a cruise itinerary shift, hotel rebrand, port closure, park access change, route cancellation, or updated destination rule, we update the article and refresh the relevant date information. These are generally treated as updates rather than corrections.

Updates vs. Corrections

Travel coverage changes because the world changes. A cruise line may cancel a sailing, a hotel may change ownership, a resort may renovate, a destination may introduce new entry rules, or a tour operator may adjust its offerings. When an article was accurate at the time of publication but later becomes outdated, we generally treat the revision as an update rather than a correction.

Corrections are reserved for information that was inaccurate, misleading, or materially incomplete at the time it was published or last substantively updated.

Reader and Industry Feedback

We welcome feedback from readers, cruise lines, hotels, resorts, tourism boards, destination marketing organizations, tour operators, outfitters, public relations representatives, and other sources.

Requests to change coverage for promotional, reputational, or preference-based reasons are reviewed at our editorial discretion. Commercial relationships, affiliate partnerships, hosted travel, advertising, or public relations requests do not determine whether a correction is made.

Why This Matters

Travelers make real decisions based on the information they read: which cruise to book, which hotel to trust, which destination to visit, which port to explore, which tour to take, and when to go. Accuracy matters, and we would rather correct something quickly than leave readers with information that is incomplete, outdated, or wrong.

Contact Us

To report an error or request a correction, please contact us.