How to report an error
If you see something on Quick Cash that looks wrong — a dollar figure, an APR, a statute citation, a regulator name, a state legal status, a quote, anything — please tell us. You do not need to be an expert. We will check it against our primary sources and respond.
Three ways to report:
- Email — [email protected]. Include the page URL and the specific claim that looks wrong. A screenshot helps.
- Feedback form — Use the send-feedback form at the bottom of any page.
- Postal mail — Quick Cash Holdings, LLC, Attn: Corrections, [address placeholder pending finalization].
Our process
- Receipt within 24 hours. A human acknowledges your report. We don't auto-reply with "thanks for your message" and then sit on it.
- Primary-source check within 48 hours. A fact-checker who didn't write the page pulls the original source and verifies the disputed claim. See our fact-checking policy for the source tiers we use.
- Decision. Three outcomes are possible: the original is right (we explain why), the original is wrong (we correct), or the truth is ambiguous (we revise to acknowledge the ambiguity).
- Publish the correction. The page is updated, the change is date-stamped at the top, and the correction is logged on this page below.
- Notify the reporter. You receive a reply telling you exactly what was changed and why.
How we mark corrections
- Substantive corrections (a factual claim was wrong) — flagged with a "Corrected on [date]" notice at the top of the page, with a one-sentence summary of what changed.
- Clarifications (the fact was right but ambiguous or misleading in context) — flagged as "Clarified on [date]" with a short note.
- Updates (a statute or rate changed; the original was right at the time of publication) — date-stamp the update; no correction notice, since the original wasn't wrong.
We do not silently edit factual claims. If the page is materially different from what it said yesterday in a way that affects reader decision-making, the change is logged here.
Recent corrections log
Placeholder entries below illustrate the format. Real corrections will replace these as the site goes live.
| Date | Page | What changed | Source of correction |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-05-12 | Texas state hub | Effective APR market average updated from "562%" to "568%" to match the OCCC 2025 annual report. | Internal review |
| 2026-04-28 | Payday loans (money page) | Florida maximum loan capped at $500 (was incorrectly listed as $1,000 in one example row); state ceiling cite added. | Reader (anonymous) |
| 2026-04-03 | Alternatives (money page) | Credit-union PAL maximum APR clarified at 28% (the page had said 24% in one place, 28% in another). | Reader — NCUA staff |
| 2026-03-15 | What is a payday loan | "Most states" require an Extended Payment Plan softened to "many states" with a state-by-state link. | Internal review (María Rodríguez, JD) |
| 2026-02-22 | Texas state hub | Added Fort Worth to the list of cities with a 20%-of-monthly-income ordinance. | Reader (named, with permission) |
Reader credit
If you flagged a correction and would like credit, we will list you by name in the log entry. We will never publish your name without explicit permission. If you prefer to remain anonymous we will simply log the entry as "reader."
Why we publish a public log
A lot of consumer-finance sites silently rewrite pages when they're wrong. We don't. A public log of corrections is the simplest signal we can send that we take accuracy seriously and that we are accountable to readers, regulators, and our peer publications. It also helps the next person searching for the same answer: if a number on this site changed last month, that fact is searchable on this page, not buried under a quiet copy edit.
The log also disciplines us internally. Knowing that every correction gets a public entry makes our fact-checkers slower and more careful in the first pass — which is exactly what readers deserve on YMYL ("your money or your life") topics like payday lending.
What counts as a correction
We log corrections to claims of fact: dollar figures, APRs, statute citations, regulator names, legal status by state, and the substance of quoted statements. We do not log routine copy edits (a typo, an awkward sentence) or stylistic changes that do not affect meaning. When in doubt, we log it; the cost of over-disclosure is low and the trust benefit is real.
Contact
Report a correction: [email protected]. General editorial: [email protected]. Legal/compliance: [email protected].