We examine the redshifts of a comprehensive set of published Type Ia supernovae, and provide a combined, improved catalogue with updated redshifts. We improve on the original catalogues by using the most up-to-date heliocentric redshift data available; ensuring all redshifts have uncertainty estimates; using the exact formulae to convert heliocentric redshifts into the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) frame; and utilising an improved peculiar velocity model that calculates local motions in redshift-space and more realistically accounts for the external bulk flow at high-redshifts. We review 2607 supernova redshifts; 2285 are from unique supernovae and 322 are from repeat-observations of the same supernova. In total, we updated 990 unique heliocentric redshifts, and found 5 cases of missing or incorrect heliocentric corrections, 44 incorrect or missing supernova coordinates, 230 missing heliocentric or CMB frame redshifts, and 1200 missing redshift uncertainties. The absolute corrections range between
$10^{-8} \leq \Delta z \leq 0.038$
, and RMS
$(\Delta z) \sim 3{\times 10^{-3}}$
. The sign of the correction was essentially random, so the mean and median corrections are small:
$4{\times 10^{-4}}$
and
$4{\times 10^{-6}}$
respectively. We examine the impact of these improvements for
$H_0$
and the dark energy equation of state w and find that the cosmological results change by
$\Delta H_0 = -0.12\,\mathrm{km\,s}^{-1}\mathrm{Mpc}^{-1}$
and
$\Delta w = 0.003$
, both significantly smaller than previously reported uncertainties for
$H_0$
of 1.0
$\mathrm{km\,s}^{-1}\mathrm{Mpc}^{-1}$
and w of 0.04 respectively.