Get in touch
Whether you need help using a calculator, want to report a confusing result, or noticed a broken link, send the details here. The most useful messages include the page URL, the inputs you used, what you expected to happen, and what looked wrong.
We aim to respond to practical site questions within 24-48 hours. Some requests take longer when they involve checking calculator logic, updating a guide, or comparing a page against a current rule or source.
Why contact us?
What we cannot do by email
We cannot tell you which investment, loan, insurance policy, account, or tax move is personally right for you. Wealthton is an educational site, so we can explain how a tool works, improve a page, or point you to the relevant methodology, but we do not provide personalized financial, legal, tax, or investment advice.
For decisions involving taxes, contracts, borrowing approvals, insurance policies, or large portfolio changes, verify details with official documents or a qualified professional.
Contact form
Use the form to send your message directly to our support inbox. If you are asking about a calculator, include enough detail for us to recreate the scenario: values entered, selected region or currency, and the result that looked confusing.
Thank you. Your message has been sent successfully.
How feedback improves Wealthton
Most useful site improvements start with a specific reader question: “Why does this number change so much?”, “What does this label mean?”, or “Which assumption is doing the most work?” When a question points to a real gap, we may update the page with a clearer explanation, a better example, or a more obvious limitation note.
We also use feedback to prioritize calculators and learning pages. A single message about an unclear formula can lead to a methodology note. Repeated questions about the same topic can become a guide, FAQ, or example scenario.
Privacy note
Please avoid sending account numbers, statements, SIN/SSN details, passwords, or other sensitive personal financial information. Calculator examples can usually be described with rounded numbers.
Examples of useful messages
“The rent-versus-buy page says buying wins, but I am only staying three years. Which input should I check first?” is easier to investigate than “the calculator is wrong.” “On mobile, the mortgage payment label wraps over the field” is also useful because it names the device problem clearly.
Short, specific messages help us fix pages faster and make the public explanation better for the next reader.
If you are reporting a content issue, include the sentence or section that felt unclear. If you are suggesting a new calculator, describe the decision it should help with, not only the calculator name. That keeps new pages focused on useful planning questions instead of adding another thin tool.