Reviewed sources and intentionally narrow
New York City Guide is written as a city decision system. Each place has to support a base, route, arrival, fallback, or neighborhood choice before it earns a page.
Use official sources first for address, contact, booking, ticket, and visit facts.
Write around decisions a traveler needs to make, not around keyword volume.
Keep public pages narrow enough that a visitor can make a choice quickly.
Expand New York City Guide only when the next neighborhood, place, or guide strengthens a real visitor decision.
How we evaluate local recommendations
Our local recommendations are based on a mix of editorial research, source checks, field notes where available, local context, and feedback from people who know or have used the place.
When useful, we speak with local residents, hospitality professionals, repeat visitors, and independent contributors to understand how a place works in real visitor situations. We use this input to judge whether a recommendation is practical, consistent, and useful for the guide's intended audience.
We may also consider private feedback about customer experiences. Private comments are treated as confidential: we do not publish names, identifying details, screenshots, or direct quotes without permission. Private feedback is used only as an internal editorial signal, and we look for repeated patterns before relying on it.
A place is recommended only when the overall evidence supports it: location fit, consistency of experience, service reliability, value for the intended visitor, and alignment with the guide's purpose. Paid placement, partnership interest, or owner outreach does not guarantee recommendation.