Verified Methodology
Every Relocation Roadmaps guide follows one rule: we only ship what we’d trust for our own move.
Our process blends AI efficiency with human and expert review so each guide is accurate, current, and transparent.
1. Human + AI, Every Time
AI helps with the heavy lifting—sorting sources, spotting patterns, and drafting early versions. But every section you read has been reviewed and rewritten by a human editor who checks for clarity, coherence, and real-world usefulness. Nothing goes live until it reads like advice from someone who’s actually planning this move with you.
2. High-Risk Hubs Are Expert-Reviewed
Visa, healthcare, and finance Hubs are treated as “high-risk” subjects and are always reviewed by qualified experts before publication—such as licensed professionals or experienced local specialists, depending on the topic. Details in these sections are cross-checked against official sources, then put through expert review using a structured rubric (covering things like Evidence Grade and editor confidence) so the most serious decisions rest on the strongest ground.
3. Freshness & Version Control
Guides are version-stamped (e.g., “Q4 2025 Edition”) and reviewed on a regular schedule, with additional updates when laws, regulations, or pricing change sooner than expected. Behind the scenes we keep a change log—what changed, why, and when—so each new edition is traceable, not random.
4. Primary Sources First
We prioritize primary and official sources: government sites, statutes, regulations, major hospitals, banks, and visa authorities. When we use secondary explainers or community insight, we treat them as supporting context—not the foundation—and never rely on anonymous or recycled content for critical guidance.
5. Transparent and Correctable
If you spot something that looks outdated, unclear, or incomplete, you can reach us at support@relocationroadmaps.com. We’ll re-check the underlying sources, update the guide where needed, and roll those changes into the next versioned release so improvements benefit every reader—not just the person who wrote in.