Use the site as current guidance, not as the final source of truth.
Savings Planner is built around current product data, but rates and conditions can change quickly. This page explains the right way to think about that boundary.
How to think about data freshness
Savings Planner uses current product data to support comparisons, calculator scenarios, and guide pages. But a public product page is never the same thing as a real-time bank system, which means users should always allow for the possibility of lag or recent changes.
The right way to use the site is to treat it as a strong narrowing tool, then confirm the current product terms with the bank before you act.
What can change quickly
Savings rates, bonus conditions, intro periods, balance caps, and linked-account rules can all change quickly. Some changes are straightforward. Others alter the meaning of the product, especially when the best rate depends on a narrow set of qualifying steps.
That is why a bank's official page remains the final source of truth for the live product details.
What this page is not claiming
This page is not making a hard public promise about exact refresh frequency, monitoring windows, or update service levels.
It exists to set a realistic expectation: the site aims to stay current, but the final verification step still belongs on the official bank page.
How to use this in practice
Use Savings Planner to compare options, understand trade-offs, and build a shortlist. Then open the bank page for the final rate, conditions, and eligibility check.
That is especially important when a decision depends on an intro rate, a monthly bonus rule, or a balance threshold that could materially change the outcome.
