A public log of factual corrections issued to BedBoy product pages, BedBoy Scores, blog posts and methodology content. Where a score moves on refresh, the previous figure and the date of the change appear on the product page and in the entry below.
How corrections are handled
When something on BedBoy is wrong, we fix it. Factual errors are corrected at the top of the affected page, dated, and logged here as a separate entry. History is not edited away. The trail stays public, and each entry names the editor who approved the correction.
To report an error, email [email protected] with the URL of the page and the claim you believe is incorrect. Editorial responds within five working days. Wider complaints route via contact and escalate to the ICO or ASA where appropriate.
Original claim: The Silentnight brand introduction described the company as “voted the best in the UK.”
Correction: That phrase was unsourced and we could not match it to a named industry award. The introduction has been rewritten around verifiable facts: founding date, head office location, and the product range Silentnight sells in the UK.
Original state: Per-product evidence panels listed a subset of categories; pressure relief, durability and off-gassing were not surfaced.
Correction: Evidence panels now include all three. A small number of headline scores have moved by half a point as a result. The previous score and the change date are recorded on the affected product pages.
Original state: The methodology page lived at /how-we-test, which implied first-hand product testing for every entry.
Correction: Renamed to /how-we-score. Most products on BedBoy are scored from specification and aggregated customer sentiment rather than from hands-on testing, and the URL now reflects that. The old URL 301-redirects to the new one and every internal link has been updated.
BedBoy Scores are refreshed on at least an annual cycle. A refresh is triggered sooner where the manufacturer announces a real change to construction, the retailer changes trial or warranty terms, or aggregated customer sentiment shifts. When a score moves, the product page shows the previous score and the change date alongside the new figure.
For the full refresh policy and the inputs that drive a score, see How we score.