Company

Contact Us

Have a question, correction, or suggestion for Calculatorcity? Use this page to understand the best way to contact us and what details make a report useful. Clear feedback helps us fix calculator issues faster and improve the site for everyone.

Best way to reach us

For general questions, corrections, and feedback, email us at contact@calculatorcity.in. A useful message explains what page you were using, what you expected, what happened instead, and whether the issue is about formula accuracy, wording, layout, links, mobile behavior, or missing content. If the issue is India-specific, include the official source or notification if you have one. That helps us verify the rule rather than guessing.

Please do not send sensitive documents such as tax returns, bank statements, medical reports, passwords, Aadhaar numbers, PAN images, salary slips, or private contracts. Calculator issues can usually be reported with sample inputs instead of real personal data. For example, you can say that a ₹10,00,000 input at 18% GST produced an unexpected result without sharing an actual invoice.

Bug reports

Bug reports are most helpful when they are specific. Include the page URL, browser name, device type, screen size if relevant, input values, selected options, result shown, and result expected. If a button does not respond, mention whether other calculators work. If a chart is blank, mention whether the result cards still calculate. If a result card overflows, include the exact large number entered. These details help separate formula bugs from layout bugs.

A strong bug report might say: On the SIP calculator, I entered monthly SIP ₹5,00,000, expected return 20%, period 40 years, and the large result value overflowed the card on desktop. That report is actionable because it includes the calculator, input values, symptom, and device context. Vague reports such as the calculator is wrong are harder to fix because we have to recreate the missing details.

Formula corrections

Formula corrections are welcome, especially for tax, state, banking, education, and utility topics. Please include the exact rule source when possible. For Indian tax pages, useful sources include Finance Act changes, Income Tax Department pages, GST notifications, EPFO updates, PFRDA notes, or official small-savings rate notifications. For state pages, government department pages or official circulars are better than screenshots from third-party websites.

We review corrections carefully because changing a calculator affects many users. Sometimes two sources appear to disagree because they apply to different years, categories, states, income types, consumer classes, or edge cases. In those situations, we may update wording to make the assumption clearer rather than changing the formula for everyone. The goal is correctness plus transparency.

Content suggestions

If you want a new calculator, describe the problem it should solve and the formula or rule it should use. A good suggestion includes example inputs, expected outputs, units, common edge cases, and a note about who would use it. For example, a good request for an India page might include a state, rule year, official rate table, and a sample calculation. A good request for a science page might include the equation, unit conversions, and common classroom examples.

We prioritize calculators that many people need, have clear formulas, and can be explained responsibly in a static browser page. We are especially interested in tools that reduce confusion around Indian personal finance, tax, salary, property, vehicle, education, utility, and investment decisions. We also improve existing pages when a better table, FAQ, chart, or worked example would help more than a new page.

Partnership and media questions

Calculatorcity is a calculator and educational utility site. If you want to reference a calculator in an article, classroom resource, help document, or internal workflow, you can link directly to the relevant page. If you want broader collaboration, content correction, attribution, or permission for larger reuse, contact us with the purpose, pages involved, expected audience, and publication format.

We do not endorse products simply because they relate to a calculator. Financial, loan, tax, education, health, insurance, investment, and property topics require user trust. Any partnership request should be transparent about the organization, offer, compensation, and user impact. Calculatorcity’s first obligation is to keep calculator pages clear and useful.

Support expectations

Calculatorcity is a free website, so support is practical rather than instant. We aim to prioritize issues that affect calculation accuracy, broken pages, navigation, accessibility, mobile layout, visible unfinished text, and official rule updates. General questions may take longer, especially if they require research or if the issue is better handled by a professional adviser.

We cannot provide personal financial planning, tax filing, legal advice, medical diagnosis, or official eligibility decisions by email. We can clarify how a calculator works, review a potential bug, improve wording, or consider a correction. If your decision has legal, tax, medical, or financial consequences, use the calculator as preparation and then speak with the appropriate professional or official source.

Accessibility feedback

Accessibility matters because calculator pages are often used under pressure. If a label is unclear, a button is hard to tap, a contrast level is weak, a result does not announce properly, or keyboard navigation fails, tell us the page and device. We try to use semantic HTML, visible labels, readable tables, responsive layouts, and predictable controls, but real feedback catches issues that automated checks can miss.

Mobile feedback is especially useful. Many users calculate EMI, GST, salary, CGPA, and unit conversions on phones. A page that looks fine on desktop can still have crowded controls, long result values, or tables that need horizontal scrolling on smaller screens. Screenshots are helpful if they avoid personal information.

Privacy when contacting us

Contact messages are different from calculator inputs. Calculator inputs normally run locally in your browser, but an email you send is intentionally transmitted. Keep messages focused on the issue and use sample data when possible. If we need more information, we will ask for the minimum practical detail. We do not need your full identity to fix most calculator bugs.

If you send a correction request, we may keep the message while reviewing and updating the page. If you later want a support message deleted, contact us from the same email address and describe the request. Some minimal records may remain if needed for security, abuse prevention, or legal compliance, but we aim to avoid unnecessary storage.

Quick contact checklist

Before sending a message, check whether the calculator page already has a formula section, FAQ, important notes, or reference table that answers the question. If the issue remains, include the page URL, exact inputs, selected mode, actual result, expected result, device, browser, and source for corrections. This checklist may feel detailed, but it saves time and helps us fix the right thing.

Thank you for helping improve Calculatorcity. A calculator website becomes stronger when users report real problems from real use: a confusing label, an outdated rule, a broken link, a result that needs better formatting, or a missing example. Those details help turn a basic tool into a reliable public resource.

How to use this page

Read company pages the same way you would read a calculator result: start with the purpose, then check the details that apply to your situation. The About page explains why the site exists and how we think about quality. The Privacy Policy explains what happens to information during normal use. The Terms page explains the boundary between a helpful calculation and professional advice. The Blog page gives practical learning guides. Contact and Help explain how to get support and report issues clearly.

If you are reviewing Calculatorcity for production use, school use, workplace sharing, or a family recommendation, look for three things. First, calculator inputs should be labelled clearly enough that a user knows what to type. Second, pages should explain formulas and limitations instead of presenting a number without context. Third, navigation should make important tools easy to find without hiding legal, privacy, help, or contact information. These pages are written to support that level of review.

For important decisions, keep the calculator page, inputs, and company guidance together. A result is strongest when the user understands both the arithmetic and the responsibility for applying it. Calculatorcity can make calculations faster and clearer, but official rules, professional judgement, and personal circumstances still matter. When in doubt, use the site to prepare better questions, then verify the final answer with the authority that controls the decision.