Contact us

Email is the only channel, and we read all of it: contact@daytradingapp.com. Corrections get answered first, everything else in the order it arrives, usually within three business days.

Before you write, the sections below tell you what we can act on fast, what we’ll read with interest, and what we can’t help with at all.

Report an outdated price, fee, or rule

This is the most useful email you can send us. Every fact-bearing page on this site carries a “Last verified” date, and pricing, broker minimums, and margin rules all change without notice. If you spot a number that no longer matches the official source, tell us the page, the figure, and where you saw the current one. We re-check against the official page and correct the article, typically within days.

Rule changes matter even more than prices right now. The regulatory regime for day traders shifted recently (the old pattern day trader framework is gone, replaced by intraday margin requirements; the background is in our explainer on the rule change), and new rules tend to get refined after rollout. If your broker tells you something that contradicts a page here, we want to know.

Press, citations, and data requests

Journalists and bloggers are welcome to cite our work with attribution and a link. The most-requested asset is our day trading statistics page, which compiles loss-rate studies and income data from primary sources. If you need the underlying citations for a story, ask; we’ll send the source list.

Partnerships and advertising

Short version: coverage is not for sale. This site currently has no paid relationships with any product or broker we cover, and rankings are produced under a fixed methodology you can read at how we rate. If a commercial relationship ever begins, it gets disclosed on our disclosure page and on every affected page, and it still won’t move a rating. Pitches that start from “what would it cost to be ranked first” get deleted.

Product teams are welcome to flag factual errors about their own platform. That’s a correction, not a negotiation, and we treat it like any other reader report: we verify against the official documentation and fix what’s wrong.

What we can’t help with

We don’t give personal financial advice, recommend trades, review your account, or manage money. Nothing on this site is financial advice, and email doesn’t change that. Most day traders lose money, and no inbox reply from us will change those odds either.

We also can’t resolve disputes with your broker. If you have a complaint about a brokerage firm, the right channel is FINRA’s investor complaint center, and general investor-protection resources live at Investor.gov, run by the SEC.

If you’re new to all of this and your question is really “where do I start,” skip the email. The answer is already written: how to start day trading.

Who you’re writing to

Every page here is researched and written by the Day Trading App Team under a single editorial process: live verification against official sources, judgments derived from documented facts, no fabricated testing claims. The full description of how that works is on our about page.

FAQ

Do you give personal trading or investment advice?

No. The site publishes research and analysis, not advice, and we don’t respond to requests for trade recommendations, account reviews, or portfolio opinions. For decisions about your money, talk to a licensed professional.

Can a product pay to be included or ranked higher?

No. Rankings follow the published methodology at how we rate, and there are currently no paid relationships with any product or broker covered on this site. Factual corrections from product teams are welcome; placement requests are not.

How do I report an outdated price or a broken page?

Email contact@daytradingapp.com with the page URL, the figure or element that’s wrong, and a link to the current official source if you have one. Corrections are the highest-priority mail we get and usually ship within days.

How fast do you reply?

Corrections first, usually within one to two business days. Everything else within three. If your email asks for financial advice, expect no reply; that’s policy, not rudeness.