Source transparency
How QueueCheck uses official sources
QueueCheck is an independent public information service. We use official public updates, public datasets, and reviewed reader submissions to help people understand wait times without treating any estimate as a personal guarantee.
What we check
We look at public official pages, published processing-time tools, downloadable datasets, statistical releases, and agency guidance pages that affect government queues. We do not sign in to private accounts, access individual case files, or ask readers for private case numbers.
How official information is handled
- Official values are shown with source context, capture dates, and clear labels so readers can tell official updates from reader submissions.
- Public sources should be checked respectfully. If a source is unavailable or changes format, QueueCheck should explain the issue and keep the latest verified information visible.
- News and guide pages should summarize useful figures on QueueCheck first, then cite the official source at the bottom so readers are not forced away just to understand the update.
- If a number cannot be verified, the page should say so plainly instead of inventing precision.
Independent, not official
QueueCheck is not a government agency, law firm, visa consultant, or official appointment provider. Official links are citations, not endorsements. Readers should always follow the final instruction from the relevant government source or a qualified professional for their situation.
Corrections and source concerns
If a source changed, a number looks wrong, or you operate an official public source and want to report a concern, contact info@queue-check.com.