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Send feedback, report a calculator issue, suggest a useful tool, or flag a broken page.

Useful feedback is one of the easiest ways to make the site better. If a number result looks wrong, include the page address, the numbers entered, the answer shown and the answer you expected. If a guide is unclear, tell us which sentence or section caused the problem. Short, specific messages are easier to check than broad comments.

What to send

Use the form for calculator corrections, broken links, unclear wording, outdated references, missing internal links, accessibility issues or ideas for useful new tools. For calculator corrections, the most helpful detail is the exact input values, because that makes the calculation easy to reproduce.

What happens next

Messages are reviewed for site improvements, bug fixes and content updates. If your message needs a reply, use an email address where you can be reached. The form is not for personal financial, medical, legal, tax, engineering or academic advice, but it is the right place to report anything on the site that looks inaccurate or confusing.

Before sending a new calculator idea, include the everyday problem it would solve. A useful suggestion is usually phrased as a question, such as how much something costs, how long something takes, what target is needed, or which option is easier to compare.

For broken pages, include the device or browser if the issue only happens in one place.

If your message is about a published article, include the source or date that should be checked. That helps separate a typo from a calculation or reference that needs a fuller review.

Before sending a message

If you are reporting a result that looks wrong, include the page name, the numbers entered and what you expected to happen. That gives enough detail to reproduce the issue without asking for private information.

If you are suggesting a new page, describe the everyday question it should answer. The best ideas are usually practical: comparing two options, checking a target, planning a cost, understanding a label or avoiding a common mistake.

Keep private details out of messages

Please avoid sending passwords, bank details, medical records, school records or anything else private. A calculator report normally only needs the page name, the numbers entered and a short explanation of what looked wrong.

If your message is about a new idea, include the question a visitor would type into a search box. That helps judge whether the idea belongs as a calculator, a worksheet, a guide or a short question page.

For broken links or layout issues, the page address and device type are usually enough to start checking.