The readers’ editor
The readers’ editor is Guardian News & Media (GMM) internal ombudsman. The Guardian was the first UK newspaper to adopt a readers’ editor in 1997.
The job of the readers’ editor is “to collect, consider, investigate, respond to, and where appropriate come to a conclusion about readers’ comments, concerns, and complaints in a prompt and timely manner, from a position of independence within the paper”. The global readers’ editor role covers the Guardian (including Guardian US and Guardian Australia) and Guardian Weekly.
For complaints about Observer editorial content published on the Guardian’s website, please see the relevant section further down this page.
Elisabeth Ribbans is the Guardian’s fifth readers’ editor and took up the global role in January 2020.
GNM policy is to correct substantial errors as soon as possible. Corrections appear on the relevant web page and/or in the newspaper and significant corrections are collated in the Guardian corrections and clarifications column.
What does the readers’ editor cover?
The readers’ editor can look into complaints about editorial content in our newspapers and the online services that we control. The readers’ editor looks at complaints and queries against the GNM editorial code of practice.
The GNM editorial code of practice builds upon the Editors’ Code of Practice followed by members of Ipso, which is itself an updated version of the Press Complaints Commission Editors’ Code to which GNM provided input over many years.
Before contacting the readers’ editor, you should read through GNM editorial code to understand whether the readers’ editor is the correct route for your complaint. The editorial code handles complaints in 16 areas. They are:
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Accuracy
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Opportunity to reply
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*Privacy
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*Harassment
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Intrusion into grief or shock
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Reporting suicide and self-harm
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*Children
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*Children in sex cases
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*Hospitals
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*Reporting of crime
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*Clandestine devices and subterfuge
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Victims of sexual assault
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Discrimination
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Financial journalism
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Confidential sources
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Witness payments in criminal trials
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*Payment to criminals
Where there are asterisks above, the Editorial Code recognises that complaints should be weighed against a judgment as to whether the story is in the public interest.
What the readers’ editor won’t look at
The readers’ editor won’t look at complaints that fall outside of the GNM editorial code (see above).
The readers’ editor office was created to resolve substantial complaints and queries from individuals who feel we’ve breached the Guardian’s editorial standards. As such, the readers’ editor’s time, effort and resources will be focused on such complaints, and she reserves the right not to consider complaints:
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From anyone not personally and directly affected by the matter which forms the subject of the complaint.
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That are trivial, hypothetical or otherwise vexatious or insignificant.
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That are without justification (such as an attempt to argue a point of view or to lobby).
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About advertising (unless in exceptional circumstances).
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About Guardian reader offers.
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That are legal complaints.
How do I complain?
Please read the GNM editorial code first to understand whether the readers’ editor can look into your complaint. You can then email the readers’ editor’s office directly on guardian.readers@theguardian.com , or write to The readers’ editor, The Guardian, Kings Place, 90 York Way, London, N1 9GU outlining the following points:
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The article you’re complaining about.
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The date on which it appeared.
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Whether the article appeared in print or online (and whether through a browser or via one of our mobile apps).
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The nature of your complaint in no more than 500 words.
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Which part of the Editorial Code it breaches.
You can also leave a voicemail on +44 (0)20 3353 4736 from Monday to Friday.
Please note that in making a complaint, you agree to respond promptly to any request for further information. Our complaints process is free of charge, regardless of outcome.
We reserve the right to amend this policy as required. We will publish the current policy on our website. Your complaint will be considered against the published policy on the date of receipt of your complaint.
What happens to your complaint?
Once we’ve received your complaint, you should receive an automated reply acknowledging receipt. If your complaint is being taken up, we aim to contact you within 72 hours.
We aim to give a substantive response to your complaint within 28 days of receiving all the necessary information to allow us to investigate. However, this may take longer in more complex cases where more information is required, or where journalists are away or unreachable.
If we receive multiple complaints about the same issue we may not respond to all.
If the readers’ editor deems there to have been a breach of the GNM editorial code, she will suggest an appropriate remedy. Corrections and clarifications will appear on the relevant web page and/or in the newspaper.
We will always aim to handle your complaint fairly, courteously and with respect. We expect the same behaviour from complainants and reserve the right to decline to consider complaints that are abusive or gratuitously offensive.
If at any stage of your complaint we do not hear back from you within 28 days, we will consider your complaint satisfied and closed.
Appeal process
If you are unhappy with our final response to your complaint the readers’ editor will direct you to the Review Panel, which provides an external review of the decision of the readers’ editor. A request for review will be considered where a substantive complaint was brought to the readers’ editor within four months from the date of publication in print, or 12 months from the date of publication online.
Should your complaint reach this stage, the readers’ editor will send you all the information you need to appeal to the Review Panel.
Corrections
If you’ve spotted a potential mistake in our editorial content please email guardian.readers@theguardian.com so that we can look into it.
Complaints about Observer editorial content
The Observer was the Guardian’s sister Sunday newspaper from June 1993 until April 2025. The Observer’s digital journalism from that period remains published on our website. Complaints about articles published up to 21 April 2025 may be submitted to the readers’ editor according to the process described above and using the email address observer.readers@theguardian.com For articles published from 22 April 2025 onwards, please contact Tortoise Media, the Observer’s new publisher, at readers@observer.co.uk
Corrections and clarifications relating to the Observer prior to the transfer of ownership can be found in the For the record column, which was published weekly in print and online.
Article submissions and story suggestions
The readers’ editor is not involved in commissioning articles or deciding what is published by the Guardian.
Press releases, pitches and article submissions should be sent directly to the relevant journalist or department. Contact details are here.
To send a news tip or story idea click here.
To share your experience on a specific theme, please visit the Community page.
Useful links
Open Door is a regular column by the readers’ editor about your suggestions, concerns, complaints and other things.
To find out more about the readers’ editor and her remit, please read the full terms of reference.
See our information site for other contact information, terms of service, help for contributors and more.
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