Editorial standards
How we research and keep guides accurate
Wrong information about visas, health or money is harmful. Here's exactly how we try to avoid it — and how to hold us to it.
Sourcing
Guides that involve rules, fees, deadlines or figures are based on official Lithuanian sources — such as the Migration Department, Sodra, the State Tax Inspectorate, municipal transport operators, banks and universities — plus EU-level sources like the Immigration Portal and EURAXESS. Every such guide lists the sources we used and links to them so you can check for yourself.
“Last verified” dates
Each guide shows the month it was last verified. We only bump that date when we have actually re-checked the content against its sources. Volatile figures — the minimum wage, proof-of-funds amounts, fees — are kept in a single place and reviewed at least every January, when many of them change.
When sources disagree
Sometimes official-grade sources contradict each other (student work-hour limits are a classic example). When that happens we tell you it is contested and point you to the current law or official page, rather than presenting a single number as settled fact.
How these guides are written
Guides are researched from the sources above and drafted with AI assistance, then shaped against those sources. We are working to add named subject-matter review for the highest-stakes topics (immigration, health, money). Until a guide carries a reviewer credit, treat it as well-researched general information — not professional advice.
Corrections
If something here is out of date or wrong, we want to fix it quickly — accuracy is the entire point of this site. A correction route is published on our about page.