How We Verify Data

For visa and long-stay guides, the visible source block should point to official public pages such as immigration departments, ministries, consulates or government program websites. We quote short official phrases for key numbers, then explain what those facts mean for planning.

Verification Checklist

  • Identify the official authority for the visa or program.
  • Confirm the core numbers: allowed stay, validity, income, fees or deposit when stated.
  • Check whether local work, renewal, dependants or conversion are explicitly mentioned.
  • Keep internal data tools out of public source blocks because they are editorial infrastructure, not reader-facing authority.
  • Add a clear caution when a rule is not confirmed by the official source.

How To Read Relocate To Asia Trust Pages

These pages are not footer decoration. They explain who is responsible for the content, how visa facts are checked, where corrections go and why the site separates official rules from practical interpretation.

Who Owns The Facts

Relocate to Asia uses an editorial team model. For visas, costs and relocation planning, that matters because readers need to know the page is not personal legal advice, while factual claims are checked against official sources where possible.

How Corrections Work

If a visa rule, cost number, healthcare detail or official link changes, corrections should go through the contact page. For relocation decisions, fixing one factual error matters more than rewriting a polished paragraph.

What The Site Does Not Promise

Relocate to Asia does not guarantee visa approval, replace an immigration lawyer or sell visa services. The goal is to help readers remove weak options before they spend money.

Is This Legal Advice?

No. The content supports planning. Verify the official authority or a qualified professional before applying.

Why Does The Review Date Matter?

Visa rules change. The review month and year help readers judge how cautiously to treat a page.