Guide

Editorial Policy

How TaxReliefGuides selects topics, verifies IRS and state tax data, updates guides, and handles reader corrections.

Site standards What this page covers
Page type Institutional
Purpose Trust and clarity
Search handling index, follow

Official-first

Source hierarchy

IRS and state agencies are the primary authority

Quarterly

Core review cycle

Pillar guides checked quarterly for accuracy

Prompt

Corrections standard

Material errors corrected as soon as confirmed

Disclosed

AI and affiliate use

Both are disclosed; neither overrides editorial judgment
Editorial summary

Quick takeaways

  • editorial policy TaxReliefGuides decisions are usually driven by timing, documentation quality, and whether you stay current on new filings while fixing old problems.
  • The headline solution matters less than the full cost path: tax due, penalties, interest, payment term, compliance obligations, and the risk of collection action.
  • Readers who want to understand how the site researches, verifies, and maintains its IRS and tax content often save the most by comparing relief paths early instead of waiting until notices become more serious or payroll problems compound.
Source standards

How we choose and verify sources

Every cost figure, program rule, threshold, and deadline on this site is traced to a primary source before publication.

For federal tax pages, that primary source is IRS.gov: IRS publications, form instructions, notice pages, and official program pages. For state tax pages, it is the relevant Department of Revenue, Franchise Tax Board, Comptroller, or equivalent state agency. Secondary sources can provide useful context, but they do not replace the agency source for any number or rule that directly affects what a reader should do.

Where a year-sensitive figure cannot be confirmed from a primary source in the current editorial pass, the page leaves an explicit marker rather than guessing. We do not publish unsupported estimates as if they were facts. This standard is harder to maintain than simply filling gaps, but it is the correct default for a site that covers tax compliance, penalties, and relief eligibility.

Review cadence

How often guides are updated

Core pillar guides are reviewed quarterly. Updates happen immediately when a material rule or figure changes.

Core pillar guides cover IRS debt, payment plans, notices, penalties, deductions, credits, payroll taxes, and business taxes. They are reviewed quarterly. Each review checks regulatory references against current IRS or state agency language, verifies that year-sensitive figures match the current tax year, confirms that source links are active and correct, and checks that the practical guidance is still the right first step for the stated problem.

Secondary guides and supporting pages are reviewed on an annual cycle unless a material change requires an earlier update. Material changes include a new IRS threshold, a revised state fee, a changed form number, or a significant penalty rate adjustment. When a material change is identified, the affected page is updated as soon as practical and the reviewed date is updated to reflect the change.

Corrections policy

How we handle errors and reader corrections

Material errors are corrected promptly, acknowledged when they affect consequential decisions, and never quietly papered over.

If you find information on this site that appears factually incorrect, report it using the contact address at javiperezguides@gmail.com. Examples include a wrong threshold, an outdated fee, a broken source link, or a misleading framing. Include the page URL, the specific issue, and the official source that supports the correction. That makes it easy to review and update quickly.

All correction requests are evaluated against the cited primary source, not the identity or affiliation of the person submitting. If the correction is confirmed, the page is updated and the reviewed date reflects the change. For material errors that could affect a reader's financial or compliance decision, we note the correction within the article where it appeared rather than updating silently.

AI and affiliate disclosure

How this content is created

Drafting may use AI tools. Every published figure passes a human editorial review against primary sources.

AI writing tools may assist with drafting, structuring, and organizing content on this site. AI-generated drafts are reviewed against official sources for every fact, threshold, and program rule that matters for a reader's decision. AI does not replace source verification, and AI output is not published as fact without a primary-source check.

  • AI-assisted drafting may be used to organize outlines, compare source material, and improve readability.
  • Every published guide is reviewed by a human editor before publication.
  • Important figures are checked against public sources where available.
  • We do not publish fully automated pages without editorial review.
  • We update or remove content when source information changes.

Affiliate and revenue disclosure

This site may earn revenue from display advertising or affiliate links. When a referral link is present and a reader clicks through and completes an action, this site may earn a commission from the third party at no cost to the reader. Commercial relationships do not determine which topics are covered, how comparisons are structured, or what conclusions are reached. Affiliate links are disclosed in the relevant page content. See the Affiliate Disclosure for additional detail.

Scope limits

What TaxReliefGuides is not

The site is educational. It does not provide individualized tax, legal, or financial advice.

TaxReliefGuides is not a tax firm, a law firm, a CPA practice, or a tax preparation service. It does not represent taxpayers before the IRS or any state agency. It does not prepare returns, file documents, negotiate settlements, or provide legal strategy. The editor, Javi Pérez, is not a CPA, EA, JD, or licensed tax professional.

The content is informational and should be used to support research and planning, not to replace individualized professional advice. Readers with complex situations should consult a qualified CPA, enrolled agent, or tax attorney before acting. Complex situations include multiple unfiled years, active levies, disputed balances, payroll tax exposure, business trust fund issues, and litigation risk.

Visual snapshot

editorial policy cost and risk signals

Javi Pérez, Editor
Edited by Javi Pérez

Last reviewed: May 2026 · Editorial Policy

This guide compiles information from IRS publications, official forms, Taxpayer Advocate Service resources, and state tax agency references. It was created with AI-assisted drafting and human editorial review. Javi Pérez is not a CPA, EA, tax attorney, or financial advisor. This content is informational only and is not tax, legal, or financial advice.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Is TaxReliefGuides a tax law firm or tax preparation service?

No. TaxReliefGuides is an informational publishing site. It does not provide individualized tax, legal, or financial advice or representation.

Why are legal pages marked noindex?

They exist to support transparency and user understanding, not to compete for organic search traffic against the site’s educational guides.

Does the cookie banner support rejecting non-essential cookies?

Yes. Users can accept all cookies or reject non-essential cookies, and the preference is stored in a browser cookie.

Should readers rely on legal pages instead of professional advice?

No. These pages explain how the site works. They do not replace professional tax, legal, or privacy advice for a reader’s personal circumstances.

Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice.