Trust
Corrections and updates
Exam details change, and no source is perfect - including this one. This page explains how Exam Atlas works to keep its information accurate, what we do when something is wrong, and how you can report an error so we can fix it. The official provider is always the final authority.
How we try to get it right the first time
Our goal is that every page is accurate to its official source on the day we check it. A few standing rules make that possible:
- Official-source-first. The facts that matter - structure, fees, eligibility, validity and syllabus - come from the body that owns the certification, and we link that source on the page.
- Every page is dated. Each page shows a "last verified" date: the day we last checked it against the official sources it cites, not the day it was first written.
- AI drafts, checked against the source. Content is drafted with AI assistance from public exam objectives, then reviewed against the official provider's published information before it ships. Where a detail is not published, we say it is not specified rather than guess.
- No exam dumps, ever. We never publish leaked or "real" exam questions. Any practice questions are original and based on public exam objectives, and are clearly labelled.
For the full detail of where our facts come from, what "verified" means, and how we write practice questions, see how we research and verify.
What we do when something is wrong
Despite the checks, errors happen: a provider changes a fee, a date moves, or something slips through review. When we learn that a page is inaccurate or out of date, we treat it as a priority:
- Check it against the official source. We confirm the correct information directly with the certifying body, not with a third-party site.
- Fix it promptly. We update the page with the corrected information as soon as we have verified it.
- Re-date the page. We update the "last verified" date so you can see the page reflects a fresh check.
For anything time-sensitive - fees, exam dates, eligibility windows - always confirm on the official exam page before you register, even on a recently verified page. We organise and explain the information; the provider sets it.
How to report an error
If you spot something out of date, unclear or simply wrong, please tell us. Reader reports are one of the most useful ways we catch problems quickly.
Use the contact page and, where you can, include:
- The page URL where you saw the issue.
- What looks wrong - for example a fee, a date, an eligibility rule or a factual claim.
- The correct information and, ideally, a link to the official source that supports it.
You do not need all of that to get in touch - even a quick "this fee looks off" helps us know where to look. We read every report and check it against the official source.
A log of corrections
We will record significant corrections here as they happen, so the way we handle errors stays transparent rather than hidden.
No corrections have been logged yet. As notable fixes are made, they will be listed here with the page affected and the date.
Who stands behind this
Content is produced by the The Exam Atlas Editorial Team rather than a single named individual claiming expertise across every field. We think accountability comes from consistent standards, transparent sourcing, visible verified dates and an open corrections process - not from a personal brand. Our content is AI-assisted and reviewed against official sources before it ships; every page carries a visible AI-content notice, and our full approach is in the AI content policy.
We are not affiliated with, endorsed by or sponsored by any exam provider, and we have no courses or question banks of our own to sell. That makes our only job getting the facts right and pointing you to the authoritative source. See also our about and editorial policy.