Last updated: May 12, 2026

Vamonosalv Editorial Methodology

Vamonosalv helps Mexican travelers compare flight deals with practical context, transparent scoring, and clear booking caveats. This page explains how we collect fares, evaluate deals, publish travel guidance, and keep advertising relationships separate from editorial judgment.

Our editorial principles

  • Mexican usefulness comes first. We prioritize routes, prices, currencies, airport context, and travel questions that matter to travelers departing from Mexico.
  • Deal information must be practical. A low fare is not useful if the route, timing, baggage assumptions, or booking path are unrealistic for most readers.
  • Commercial relationships do not control rankings. Affiliate links and ads may support the site, but they do not decide which fares or guides are published.

Pre-publication review checklist

  • Does the content answer a real Mexican traveler question?
  • Are prices, dates, and route assumptions clearly caveated?
  • Are official sources used for facts that could affect money, rights, or travel eligibility?
  • Are ads and affiliate links separated from editorial claims?
  • Is the page useful even if a specific fare disappears?

1) Data collection and freshness

Fare data is collected from flight data and booking-provider feeds, then normalized for display in Mexican dollars where possible. We focus on Mexican departure airports, useful route combinations, travel dates that are still bookable, and fare details that can be checked again before a traveler commits.

Prices and availability can change quickly because airlines and booking providers update inventory constantly. Vamonosalv does not sell tickets, process payments, or control airline rules. Booking is completed on third-party websites. Stale, expired, or clearly impractical fares are removed or deprioritized when detected.

2) Deal evaluation

Each deal is evaluated against more than raw price. We consider route relevance, total trip practicality, departure airport, destination demand, likely traveler value, connection burden, and whether the displayed fare appears meaningfully better than normal expectations for that market.

Very cheap fares can rank lower if they involve poor timing, excessive connections, or unclear booking conditions. A slightly higher fare can rank well when it is nonstop, seasonal, rare from Mexico, or unusually convenient. Deal scores are editorial aids, not guarantees of savings, availability, or final checkout price.

3) Blog and guide standards

Vamonosalv blog posts are intended to add original Mexican travel context around flight deals, airline rules, airport behavior, passenger rights, route planning, and budget travel strategy. Guides should help a reader make a better decision, not simply repeat a headline or copy a third-party article.

When a post depends on facts that may change, we prefer official sources such as airlines, airports, CATSA, Transport Mexico, the Mexican Transportation Agency, government advisories, or direct provider documentation. Posts should include useful examples, caveats, internal links, and a clear connection to Mexican travelers. AI-assisted drafts require human review before publishing, including fact checks, source review, originality review, and image-rights review.

4) Advertising and affiliate independence

Vamonosalv may display ads and may earn commissions when readers use some outbound links. These relationships help keep the service free, but they do not allow advertisers or partners to buy favorable deal scores, remove legitimate caveats, or control editorial conclusions.

Ads are intended to be visually separated from navigation, forms, deal buttons, and booking actions. Affiliate relationships are disclosed on trust pages and in relevant content contexts. Readers should always verify final fare, baggage, seat, cancellation, and provider terms before booking.

5) Corrections and updates

Flight prices, airline rules, and route schedules can change without notice. When we identify outdated or inaccurate information, we update the page, remove the stale deal, or add a clearer caveat. Readers can report issues through the contact page.

Major trust, policy, and methodology pages should show current information and be reviewed before AdSense resubmission. Older blog posts should be refreshed when airline rules, fees, or official guidance materially change. Corrections are prioritized when they affect booking decisions, safety, legal requirements, passenger rights, or costs.