We want this work used, shared and built on. These terms exist to make that easy, and to be honest about the limits.
Using the site. LoopholeKiln is free to read and use. We ask only that you do not misuse it: no attempting to break, overload, or gain unauthorised access to the site or its systems, and no using it to do anything unlawful.
Our words. The written content of this site is published by Kiln Guides and is protected by copyright. You are welcome to quote it with a credit and a link. For anything beyond ordinary quotation, ask us first at hello@kilnguides.co.uk.
Our data, openly licensed. The structured dataset behind the site, meaning the league table, the figures and the source list, is published as open data under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence (CC BY 4.0). You can copy, share, adapt and build on it, including for commercial use, as long as you credit LoopholeKiln and link back. This is deliberate. The whole point is for the numbers to travel; the "cite this as" line on the data pages gives you the exact wording.
Not advice. Nothing here is tax, legal or financial advice. See our disclaimer for the full position. Every figure is sourced so you can check it. Check it before you rely on it, and speak to a qualified professional about your own affairs.
No warranty, and limited liability. We provide the site in good faith and free of charge, and we work hard to be accurate, but we cannot guarantee it is free of error or always current. To the fullest extent the law allows, we accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from use of, or reliance on, the site. Nothing in these terms excludes or limits any liability that cannot be excluded or limited under the law of England and Wales.
Links out. We link to primary sources held on other websites. We are not responsible for the content of those sites.
Changes and governing law. We may update these terms and will date any change. These terms, and any dispute or claim arising out of them or the use of the site, are governed by the law of England and Wales, and the courts of England and Wales have jurisdiction.