Corrections Policy

Last Updated: January 20, 2026

At ExtenzeOfficial.com, accuracy is a core value. We publish educational content about supplements and related topics, and we understand that details can change over time—especially in product listings, packaging, and marketing claims across the internet.

This Corrections Policy explains how we handle factual errors, outdated information, reader feedback, and content updates.

Important: ExtenzeOfficial.com is an independent educational website. We are not affiliated with, sponsored by, or officially connected to ExtenZe® or any brand owners, manufacturers, or retailers. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.


1) Why Corrections Matter

Health-adjacent content (even when strictly educational) carries a higher responsibility than general lifestyle content. People may use the information they read to make decisions about:

  • Whether to try a supplement
  • How to interpret a label
  • How to reduce buying risk (counterfeits, misleading listings)
  • When to talk to a clinician instead of experimenting

Because of that, we consider corrections part of our duty to readers. We aim to:

  • Correct errors when verified
  • Clarify ambiguous language
  • Update outdated sections when better public information becomes available
  • Maintain transparency about the educational nature of our content

2) What Counts as a “Correction”?

A “correction” usually involves one or more of the following:

A) Factual errors

  • Incorrect statements about ingredient definitions
  • Incorrect descriptions of supplement regulation or terminology
  • Wrong or outdated references to publicly available safety notices
  • Broken links to major sources (FDA, NIH, MedlinePlus, etc.)

B) Outdated information

Examples include:

  • Product pages changing their wording, policies, or offers
  • Newer public safety information from reputable sources
  • Updated consumer guidance by major institutions

C) Clarity improvements (not always “errors,” but important)

Sometimes content is technically accurate but confusing. For example:

  • A sentence may sound like medical advice when it is meant to be educational
  • A paragraph may not clearly distinguish between “ingredient evidence” and “product evidence”
  • A section may need stronger disclaimers for safety

We treat clarity issues seriously because confusing health-related content can mislead even without being “wrong.”


3) What Does NOT Count as a Correction?

Some requests are not corrections, even if the sender frames them that way. For example:

  • Requests to remove warnings: We will not remove safety disclaimers or important cautions just because someone dislikes them.
  • Marketing demands: We do not change educational content to match marketing claims.
  • Unverifiable claims: We do not publish “results” stories as facts unless they can be supported by credible evidence.
  • Individual medical questions: We cannot provide diagnosis or treatment guidance. That is not a “correction.”

If you have a medical concern, consult a licensed clinician. See: Medical Disclaimer.


4) How to Submit a Correction Request

If you believe something on our site is inaccurate, outdated, or unclear, we welcome your message. The best way to submit a correction request is through our contact form.

Submit here: Contact Us

To help us investigate quickly, please include:

  • The URL of the page you’re referencing
  • The exact text you believe is incorrect (copy/paste is ideal)
  • What you believe the correct information is
  • A reputable supporting source if available

Use the subject line: “Correction Request”


5) Supporting Sources We Consider Most Useful

For corrections, we prioritize reputable sources. Examples include:

  • Government and public health sources (e.g., FDA, NIH, MedlinePlus)
  • Major medical institutions (e.g., academic medical centers)
  • Peer-reviewed research and systematic reviews (when relevant)
  • Official manufacturer pages (for basic identification info only, not medical claims)

We generally do not treat anonymous blogs, spam pages, affiliate landing pages, or unverifiable screenshots as strong evidence.


6) Our Review Process (What Happens After You Submit)

When we receive a correction request, we follow a consistent workflow:

Step 1: Intake and categorization

We categorize the request as one of the following:

  • Factual error
  • Outdated section
  • Broken link / formatting issue
  • Clarity / wording improvement
  • Non-correction request (e.g., medical advice request, marketing demand)

Step 2: Verification

We verify the claim using reputable sources. If the request includes a credible source, we review it. If not, we may still investigate if the issue appears plausible.

Step 3: Editorial decision

We determine whether an update is needed and what type of change is appropriate:

  • Correction of a statement
  • Addition of clarifying context
  • Replacement or removal of broken links
  • Restructuring a section for clarity
  • No change (if the content is accurate and clear)

Step 4: Implementation

When a correction is needed, we update the page. When the change is substantial, we may also update the “Last Updated” note on that page.

Step 5: Optional follow-up

We may respond to the sender if the request is legitimate and we have the ability to reply. However, we may not respond to every message due to volume and spam.


7) Timing: How Fast Do We Make Corrections?

We aim to address legitimate correction requests within a reasonable timeframe. The timeline depends on:

  • The seriousness of the issue
  • Whether it involves safety-critical information
  • The effort needed to verify and update

Safety-related corrections (for example, a misleading sentence that might encourage unsafe supplement use) are prioritized.


8) Transparency About Updates

We strive to be transparent without cluttering pages with unnecessary logs.

As a general rule:

  • Minor changes (typos, formatting, broken links) may not receive a visible update note.
  • Material changes (meaningful content updates) may include an updated “Last Updated” date on the page.
  • Major safety-related changes may be reflected prominently in the content itself.

If you want to understand how we research and maintain content, see: Editorial Policy & Review Methodology.


9) Product Listing and Pricing Disclaimer

We do not control third-party merchant listings. Prices, availability, policies, and product presentation can change at any time without notice.

We do our best to provide stable educational guidance, but:

  • We cannot guarantee that a merchant’s website content remains the same over time.
  • We cannot guarantee that a product listing is accurate or consistent across sellers.
  • We encourage readers to verify details on the merchant website before purchasing.

Because this is an affiliate site, some pages may contain purchase links. For transparency, see: Affiliate Disclosure.


10) Requests From Brands, Rights Holders, or Representatives

If you represent a brand owner or rights holder and believe content on our site is inaccurate or infringes rights, we take those requests seriously.

Please contact us via Contact Us and use the subject line “Legal / Trademark Inquiry.” Include:

  • Your name and organization
  • Your relationship to the rights holder
  • The URL(s) you are referencing
  • A clear explanation of the concern
  • What resolution you are requesting

We do not remove content simply because it is unfavorable. We will evaluate requests based on accuracy, fairness, and legitimate rights considerations.


11) Our Commitment to Readers

We built ExtenzeOfficial.com to be a safer, clearer alternative to hype-driven pages. Corrections are part of that mission.

We commit to:

  • Taking credible reports seriously
  • Prioritizing safety-related accuracy
  • Updating content when verified corrections are needed
  • Maintaining transparency about affiliate relationships
  • Avoiding exaggerated claims and misleading language

12) Contact

To submit a correction request, visit: Contact Us

Suggested subject line: Correction Request


Final Note

Thank you for helping improve the accuracy and usefulness of our content. Reader feedback plays a real role in keeping educational content responsible—especially in categories where misinformation is common.

Reminder: This site provides educational information only and is not medical advice. For health concerns, consult a licensed healthcare professional. See: Medical Disclaimer.