Traveler usefulness comes first
ResortGrader content should help travelers understand what a resort is good at, where it may fall short, who it fits best, and what to compare before booking.
ResortGrader is built to help travelers compare resorts using practical review signals, category grades, traveler fit, profile data, and clear explanations of strengths and tradeoffs.
Travelers need more than star ratings and polished photos. ResortGrader focuses on the details that shape a stay: service, rooms, amenities, dining, location, value, traveler fit, review patterns, and resort-specific tradeoffs.
ResortGrader pages are intended to be helpful, fair, specific, and transparent. The site may grow over time, but these principles should remain consistent across resort profiles, rankings, categories, and destination pages.
ResortGrader content should help travelers understand what a resort is good at, where it may fall short, who it fits best, and what to compare before booking.
A resort grade should not stand alone without explanation. ResortGrader uses supporting category signals and written context to explain why a resort may perform well or poorly.
A great family resort is not judged the same way as a luxury escape, a beach resort, a couples resort, or an all-inclusive property. Category fit matters.
ResortGrader is being built in stages. Early pages may use structured editorial placeholders, profile examples, and ranking candidates. Over time, the platform can incorporate more review submissions and resort-specific data.
Resort profiles may include guest experience, rooms, amenities, dining, location, value, strengths, tradeoffs, traveler fit, review summaries, and booking context.
Category grades help explain the overall resort experience. A resort may perform strongly in one area, such as beach access, while being weaker in another, such as dining value.
Ranking pages are meant to organize resort recommendations by trip type, destination, and traveler needs. They may become more dynamic as review volume grows.
Traveler reviews are valuable when they are specific, fair, and useful. As the platform grows, user-submitted feedback can help identify review patterns, recurring strengths, recurring complaints, and category-specific signals.
Resort information can change. Amenities, policies, ownership, fees, restaurants, renovations, booking links, and guest experience patterns can shift over time. ResortGrader allows correction requests so pages can become more accurate.
Travelers, resort representatives, or partners may contact ResortGrader to report incorrect or outdated information. Helpful requests should include the page URL and specific correction details.
ResortGrader may review correction requests before making edits. Requests that are vague, promotional, unsupported, or unrelated may not result in page changes.
Resort profiles, rankings, and category pages may be updated as new information, review patterns, traveler feedback, or resort changes become available.
ResortGrader may eventually use booking links, affiliate links, or partner links. Those relationships should not control resort grades, category explanations, review summaries, or ranking logic.
ResortGrader should not assign higher grades simply because a resort, booking partner, or affiliate program offers compensation. Ranking and grading content should be based on review signals, category fit, resort details, and traveler usefulness.
When booking links are added, users should be able to understand that some links may be commercial. Commercial relationships should be disclosed without making the page feel cluttered or confusing.
These answers explain how ResortGrader thinks about reviews, grades, rankings, corrections, and future booking relationships.
No. Rankings can evolve as more resort profiles, traveler reviews, category signals, and updated resort information are added. Early ranking pages may include candidates while the platform grows.
ResortGrader grades should not be based on payment. Commercial relationships, booking links, or affiliate programs should not determine a resort’s category grades or review summary.
Yes. Users can contact ResortGrader with corrections. The most useful correction requests include the exact page, the incorrect detail, and the corrected information.
ResortGrader becomes more helpful when reviews are fair, corrections are specific, and resort information is kept clear, practical, and useful for future travelers.