Fact Checking Policy
Last Updated: 15 May 2026
Welcome to the official MoneyTrustPoint fact checking policy page. Since we publish content related to money, loans, taxes, income, and investing, accuracy is one of our biggest responsibilities. This page explains how our team checks, verifies, and confirms every important fact before any article goes live on https://moneytrustpoint.com.
Our promise is simple. We never publish a financial fact unless we can back it with a trusted source. We follow strict fact checking steps so that every reader receives information that is honest, accurate, and safe to act on.
Why Fact Checking Matters at MoneyTrustPoint
Money decisions affect real lives. A wrong tax rule, an outdated loan rate, or a misleading investment tip can cause real financial loss to a reader. That is why fact checking is at the heart of our editorial process.
Our MoneyTrustPoint fact checking policy is built on five strong values:
- Accuracy. Every number, rule, and date must be verified.
- Transparency. We mention sources whenever possible.
- Responsibility. We take ownership of any mistakes and correct them quickly.
- Independence. No partner or advertiser can influence what we verify.
- Reader safety. Every fact is checked from a reader first point of view.
These values guide every single article on our blog.
What We Fact Check
Almost every piece of content on MoneyTrustPoint contains data, rules, or numbers that must be checked carefully. The main types of facts we verify include:
Tax Related Facts
- Income tax slabs and rates
- Deductions, exemptions, and rebates
- Filing dates and deadlines
- GST rules and updates
- Tax rules for salaried, business, and freelance income
Loan and Credit Facts
- Interest rates and EMI calculations
- Eligibility rules for personal, home, and business loans
- Bank and NBFC charges and fees
- Credit card features and benefits
- Credit score and CIBIL rules
Investment Facts
- Mutual fund details and returns
- Stock market and trading rules
- Fixed deposit and recurring deposit rates
- Government scheme details (PPF, EPF, NPS, Sukanya Samriddhi)
- Gold, real estate, and crypto rules where applicable
Make Money Online Facts
- Earning platform details and payout rules
- Freelancing and side hustle data
- Online tools, apps, and software features
- Job and gig opportunity information
General Money Facts
- Banking rules and charges
- Insurance plans and features
- Government finance schemes
- RBI, SEBI, IRDAI announcements
- Inflation and economy related figures
If a fact falls into any of these categories, our team double checks it before publishing.
Sources We Trust for Fact Checking
To keep our content reliable, MoneyTrustPoint uses only trusted, official, and well respected sources. Some of the main sources we rely on include:
Banking and Financial Institutions
- Verified pages of public and private sector banks
- NBFCs and licensed loan providers
- Recognized mutual fund houses and asset management companies
- Insurance companies registered under IRDAI
Reputed Financial Media
- Established business newspapers and financial publications
- Industry magazines and finance research portals
- Recognized economic research bodies
Research and Data Sources
- Published reports from credit bureaus (CIBIL, Experian, CRIF, Equifax)
- World Bank, IMF, and global economic reports where relevant
- Verified surveys and industry studies
If a source is unverified, biased, or unclear, we do not use it. We also avoid:
- Random social media posts
- Unverified WhatsApp forwards
- Outdated blogs or low quality content
- Anonymous tip websites
- Forums without expert moderation
Our Fact Checking Process
Every article on MoneyTrustPoint passes through a step by step fact checking process before it is published. The process includes the following steps.
Step 1: Source Selection
Our writer selects trusted sources during the research stage. Only verified websites, government portals, and respected publications are used.
Step 2: Cross Verification
Every important fact is checked from at least two reliable sources. For example, if we mention a loan interest rate, we confirm it with both the bank’s official page and an additional trusted source.
Step 3: Date and Time Check
Finance rules change often. So we also confirm:
- The date the rule was introduced
- The latest update or amendment
- The effective period of the rule
Step 4: Number and Data Check
Numbers are extra sensitive in finance content. We verify:
- Interest rates and percentages
- Tax slabs and rebate amounts
- Loan eligibility numbers
- Investment returns and historical data
- Government scheme limits
If a number cannot be verified, it is removed from the article.
Step 5: Expert Knowledge Review
For complex topics, our team studies expert opinions, official press releases, and trusted finance experts. We do not publish guesses or assumptions.
Step 6: Final Editor Review
Before publishing, an editor reviews the article one more time. The editor specifically checks:
- Every fact and figure
- Every date and rule
- Every source link or reference
- Every claim and recommendation
Only after this full review, the article goes live.
How We Handle Conflicting Information
Sometimes, two trusted sources may share different details for the same topic. When this happens, our team:
- Goes back to the original government or official source
- Checks the latest update date
- Picks the most recent and accurate version
- Mentions both versions if both are valid
- Uses cautious language so the reader knows it is a developing topic
We never guess or pick the easiest answer. Truth always comes first.
How Often We Update Facts
Finance facts can change every month, every quarter, or every year. To keep our content reliable, we update our blog posts regularly. We update an article when:
- The government announces a new tax or finance rule
- RBI changes loan, repo, or interest related rules
- SEBI or AMFI issues new investment guidelines
- A bank or NBFC updates its rates or features
- A reader reports an outdated fact
- Our routine content audit finds outdated information
After every update, we also refresh the “Last Updated” date on the article so readers know they are seeing current data.
Reader Reported Errors
Even with strong fact checking, mistakes can sometimes happen. We welcome readers to point out any error they find in our content. Our error handling process includes:
- Reader reports the error through our Contact Page or comment section.
- Our team reviews the report against the original source.
- If the report is valid, we update the article right away.
- We add a small correction note where needed.
- We thank the reader for helping us improve our content.
Reader feedback is one of our most powerful fact checking tools.
Corrections and Updates Policy
Whenever a fact is corrected, we follow these clear rules:
- The article is updated with the correct information
- The “Last Updated” date is changed to reflect the new edit
- A short correction note is added where the change is important
- Old, incorrect content is never quietly removed without a note when the fact was widely shared
Our goal is to be open about mistakes and quick to fix them.
AI and Tools We Use
We may use modern tools to help with research, grammar, and content review. However, AI or any automated tool never replaces human fact checking. Our editorial team:
- Reviews every fact manually
- Confirms data from official sources
- Uses tools only to support, not replace, the human checking process
Every important number, rule, and claim on MoneyTrustPoint is reviewed by a real person.
What We Do Not Allow
To protect reader trust, we strictly do not allow:
- Fake news or made up financial data
- Unverified rumors or get rich quick claims
- Misleading numbers, ratios, or scheme benefits
- Copied content from other websites
- Sensational or clickbait facts
- Statements that cannot be backed by a trusted source
If any content on our blog ever appears misleading, please contact us. We will investigate and act on it without delay.
Editorial Independence in Fact Checking
Fact checking is part of our editorial process, not our marketing process. This means:
- No advertiser can change our fact checking results
- No affiliate partner can pressure us to skip verification
- No sponsor can ask us to publish unverified claims
Even when we earn through affiliate links or display ads, the fact checking work always stays free of outside influence. For more details, please read our Editorial Policy and Affiliate Disclosure.
Transparency With Sources
Whenever possible, MoneyTrustPoint mentions sources directly in the content. We may do this through:
- Reference notes inside paragraphs
- External links to official government or finance pages
- Quotes from verified press releases
- Footnotes or “Source” mentions at the bottom of an article
This helps readers see exactly where a fact came from.
Limits of Fact Checking
While we work hard to verify every fact, please keep in mind:
- Finance rules and rates can change after an article is published
- Tax laws, banking rules, and investment policies are updated by government bodies often
- Personal finance decisions depend on each reader’s unique situation
- Our content is for general education, not personal advice
So before taking any major financial step, we always recommend reading the latest official rules and consulting a certified financial expert.
For more details, please read our Disclaimer page.
How You Can Help Us Stay Accurate
You play a big role in keeping MoneyTrustPoint accurate. Here is how you can help:
- Tell us if you spot an outdated number or rule
- Share suggestions for new topics we should cover
- Ask questions if any article feels unclear
- Recommend trusted sources we may have missed
- Report any misleading content you come across
Every message helps us improve our content quality for the entire community.
Updates to This Fact Checking Policy
We may update this MoneyTrustPoint fact checking policy from time to time. Changes may happen when our process improves, when new sources are added, or when new finance rules come into effect. The “Last Updated” date at the top of this page will always show the latest version.
We encourage you to revisit this page often to know how we keep our content accurate behind the scenes.
Contact Us
If you have any questions, doubts, or feedback about this MoneyTrustPoint fact checking policy, please contact us anytime.
Website: https://moneytrustpoint.com Contact Email: contact@moneytrustpoint.com Contact Page: https://moneytrustpoint.com/contact/
Thank you for trusting MoneyTrustPoint as your finance guide. Your trust is the reason we work so hard to keep every fact accurate, fair, and useful.
