TravelMe

Last updated June 9, 2026

Editorial Policy

Every page on TravelMe is built the same way. This page explains how, who checks it, and what we do when we get something wrong.

How our content is produced

TravelMe content is AI-generated from grounded sources. Destination profiles start with structured data from Wikidata and OpenStreetMap, climate figures from Open-Meteo, and live hotel and activity inventory from our booking partners. Where a page cites a claim from the open web, the pipeline validates the quote against the source before the page can publish. The model writes the prose; the facts come from the data.

How it is reviewed

Before anything goes live it passes automated quality gates: a banned-phrase scrub that strips stock AI language, and fact-grounding checks that compare concrete claims such as prices, distances, and opening hours against source data. Pages that fail are sent back for regeneration. Published pages also get a human editorial pass, led by our editor, Ryan Thayer.

Corrections

Travel facts go stale. Prices change, restaurants close, train schedules shift. If you find an error, send it to us through the contact page. We verify the report against current sources, fix the page, and the fix ships with the next publish cycle, usually within a few days.

Affiliate disclosure

Some links on TravelMe are affiliate links. They route through our /go redirect so we can count clicks, and if you book something we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Commissions never affect what we recommend or how destinations, hotels, or activities are ranked. Rankings come from the same data pipeline whether a partner pays us or not.

AI disclosure

The content is AI-generated and human-reviewed, and we do not pretend otherwise. We think AI is a better way to cover the world at the depth travelers actually need, as long as every page clears the gates above before it goes live. You can read more about who we are on the about page. If our standard ever slips, tell us.