Editorial policy

FinCalc Pro24 is built around one rule: every article should help a reader do something practical next. That might be understanding a mortgage payment, comparing credit card repayment options, or deciding whether a savings product fits the goal.

How topics are chosen

Topics are selected around questions people actually ask before using a calculator: how much they can afford, what a rate really means, whether a bigger deposit changes the decision, or when flexibility matters more than a better headline number.

How articles are written

The editorial standard is plain language first. We try to explain one clear question per page, show where the result changes in real life, and point the reader to the calculator that matches the topic. The aim is clarity, not volume.

How updates happen

Pages are reviewed when financial assumptions, tax rules, or product framing need to be refreshed. If a page has not changed in substance, it should not be treated as new just to look fresh.

What we avoid

We avoid filler, exaggerated promises, and vague “best choice” language that cannot be defended. If a trade-off depends on the reader’s own budget, flexibility needs, or risk tolerance, we say that directly.

Editorial policy | fincalc24