Yesterday I learned the hard [way][1] that I really have to work on my discipline when doing further "edit reviews". Which is fine; life is about learning and improving. Leading to this question: One of the "hints" I read in the comments/answers I got is: having 11.5 times more accepts than rejects ... is *probably* already an indication of sloppy reviewing. Now I am wondering: what do you think an "OK" acceptance rate should look like? In more detail: there are many edits/reviews per day. So in the end, the "laws of big numbers" kick in. Meaning: every reviewer should (on average) see edits of the same "quality distribution" in the end (unless you start skipping all those edits that are not your "favorite" tag) Thus: when you would compare the "approval rate" of "good" reviewers that worked on hundreds or thousands of reviews, I *think* those rates could be within the same ballpark. Going from there: 1. Are there any pages somewhere that contain such (accumulated) statistics? 2. In case you are such a "good" reviewer with hundreds, thousands of reviews - what is your "rate"; and do you agree with that idea that alone that number can be a *first* indication for problematic reviewing? [1]: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/336405/banned-from-reviewing-for-approving-an-approved-edit