Editorial Policy
How we research, write, review, and update every guide on Alias Insurance.
Alias Insurance helps drivers across the United States compare car insurance quotes and understand their coverage choices. We write every guide to answer a real question a driver asked, not to chase a search ranking. This page explains exactly how we create what you read so you can judge whether to trust it.
How we produce our content
Our writers research each topic before they draft a single line. They confirm the facts against primary sources, then write in plain language a driver can act on. An editor or a licensed agent reviews the draft for accuracy before it goes live. We hold every guide to the same standard:
- Answer the reader’s actual question early and directly.
- Back factual claims with a named source.
- State coverage rules and limits as they stand under current law.
- Avoid price or savings guarantees, because real quotes depend on your profile.
Who writes and reviews our content
Licensed insurance agents review our state guides where they hold an active license. Andy Walker holds licenses in Texas, California, and Florida, so he reviews the guides for those three states. For national guides and multi-state topics, our editorial team carries the byline and reviews the work.
When a state guide falls outside our reviewers’ licensed states, we mark it for review by a licensed agent in that state. Until that review happens, we show editorial review only. We never credit an agent for a state where they do not hold a license, because a false credential breaks the trust this page exists to build.
How we use AI
Plain disclosure: We use AI tools to assist with research, drafting, and formatting. A human editor then reviews, edits, and fact-checks every guide before we publish it. We do not publish raw AI output, and we do not list AI as an author. You deserve to know how we make what you read, so we tell you.
AI helps our team work faster on the routine parts of writing. It does not replace the judgment of a writer or the sign-off of a reviewer. A person owns every published guide and stands behind its accuracy.
How we fact-check and cite sources
Every guide that makes a factual claim links to the source behind it. We cite government and industry sources first, including:
- State Departments of Insurance for state rules and requirements.
- The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC).
- The Insurance Information Institute (III).
- Official carrier policy documents where a specific product detail matters.
When a law, a requirement, or a rate changes, we update the affected guides and refresh the last updated date
How we handle updates and corrections
We review our guides on a regular schedule and after major regulatory changes. We show a published date and a last updated date on every guide so you can see how current it is. Spotted an error? Email [[email protected]]. We check every report and fix confirmed errors quickly.
How we earn money and stay independent
Alias Insurance operates as a car insurance comparison and brokerage service. We may earn a commission when you request a quote or buy a policy through one of our partners. That commission never changes the facts in our guides or which options we describe. We report what is true whether or not it helps a partner.
A note on advice
Our guides share general information, not legal or financial advice. Confirm the details that apply to you with a licensed agent or your state insurance department before you make a decision about coverage.
Contact us about our content
Questions about a guide, a source, or a correction go to [[email protected]] or through our contact page.