Contact
Questions, feedback, or partnership inquiries? Email everydayroyalties@gmail.com.
How to Reach Us
Have a suggestion or spotted an issue? We read every note and use them to improve the simulator and guides.
Response Times
We aim to reply within 2–3 business days. Please avoid sending personal account numbers or Social Security numbers.
Before You Write
- Check the FAQ for quick answers.
- Include your device/browser if reporting a bug.
- Tell us which page or scenario you were using.
Updated 2025-10-06
Contact Options
Bug Reports
Include steps to reproduce, your browser, and any console errors if known. A quick screen recording helps us fix things fast.
Response Time
We strive to reply within 2–3 business days.
Updated 2025-10-06
Good reasons to get in touch about the Credit Score Impact tool
Messages are most helpful when they focus on clarity, corrections, or ideas that would improve the experience for others.
- Spotting confusing sections. Let us know if any part of the tool or explanations feel unclear or incomplete.
- Suggesting new scenarios. Share common credit questions or situations you'd like to see modeled in future updates.
- Flagging potential errors. If something doesn't behave the way you expect, describing the steps you took helps us troubleshoot.
While we can't provide individual financial advice, feedback about the tool itself is always welcome.
Information you should never include in a message
To protect your privacy, keep sensitive details out of any email or form related to this site.
- No full account numbers. There's never a need to share full credit card or loan numbers to ask a question.
- No full Social Security numbers. General questions about credit don't require sharing identity data.
- No full credit reports. You can describe situations in broad strokes without attaching official documents.
If you're ever unsure, share less detail and focus on the general scenario instead of specific account information.
The kinds of feedback that improve the site for everyone
Thoughtful messages can directly shape future walkthroughs, examples, and tool tweaks.
- Clarity checks. Let us know which explanations finally made something click—or where you still felt stuck.
- Scenario ideas. Describe common real-world situations that aren't yet covered in the blog or simulator presets.
- Accessibility notes. Feedback on readability, contrast, or navigation helps keep the site comfortable to use.
The more specific the feedback, the easier it is to turn it into real improvements.
What to expect after you send a message
While this site can't offer one-on-one coaching, thoughtful questions can still influence future updates.
- No individual advice. Replies won't include personalized financial recommendations.
- Theme-based responses. When many people ask about the same topic, it may become a new article or example.
- Thank-you for insights. Feedback about what's working well helps guide what to keep and expand.
Knowing the boundaries up front keeps communication clear and respectful.
Signs it might be time to talk with a professional
Self-education is powerful, but some situations are easier with guided support.
- Persistent overwhelm. If thinking about credit consistently triggers panic or shutdown.
- Complex obligations. Multiple debts, legal issues, or business credit intertwined with personal credit.
- Potential fraud. Signs of identity theft, accounts you truly didn't open, or repeated unauthorized pulls.
In those cases, pairing tools like this with a qualified counselor or advisor can be a smart move.
How to write clear questions when you ask for help
A focused question is easier to respond to and more likely to lead to a useful answer.
- Share the context. Briefly describe your goal, not just the tool you're using.
- Highlight one obstacle. Name the single part of the process you're stuck on.
- Say what you've tried. Mention attempts you've already made so advice doesn't repeat them.
This structure makes even short replies more actionable.
Respectful digital communication when you're frustrated
Money stress is real, but it helps to send messages that reflect how you want to be heard.
- Pause before sending. Take a breath or step away briefly if you're typing while upset.
- Stick to facts. Describe what happened and what you're asking for as clearly as you can.
- Save a copy. Keep a record of your message and any replies for your own files.
Calm, clear communication increases the chance of a useful response.