Corrections
Corrections Policy
If a factual claim, number, label, or ranking name is wrong, the page should be corrected with the same priority as a publishing task, not deferred behind routine expansion work.
What qualifies for correction
- Incorrect tax, housing, weather, or legal facts.
- Ranking names that do not match the displayed metric.
- Coverage claims that overstate what the page or directory actually includes.
- Broken links, missing dates, or misleading source labels that affect trust.
How corrections should be handled
Corrections should identify the affected URL, the exact claim, the evidence used to verify the change, and the effective date when timing matters.
Sources & Methodology
How to read the Corrections page responsibly
Page provenance
- Published: 2026-04-05
- Last reviewed: 2026-04-05
- Data last refreshed: 2026-04-05
- Author: Living in USA Today Editorial Team
- Reviewer: Living in USA Today Editorial Team
Methodology
This page for the Corrections page is maintained inside the shared relocation build pipeline. It is written to help users navigate decision paths, not to replace the underlying state, city, or regional guides.
Coverage and limits
This page explains how factual errors and misleading labels should be corrected across the site.
Source status
Source coverage is maintained at the page level when a direct dataset or public reference is available.
Verify before acting
- Use the Corrections page as a research layer, then open the deeper guide that matches the real decision.
- Verify volatile claims again before acting on taxes, housing costs, legal rules, or deadlines.
- Prefer direct agency and dataset sources when a move depends on one number being correct.