How to Cite Sources: The Complete Guide to Citation Styles

Choose the right citation style for your field and format your references correctly.

What Is a Citation Style?

A citation style is a standardized method for acknowledging sources in academic writing. Each style specifies how to format in-text citations and reference lists, ensuring readers can locate your sources and verify your claims.

Different academic disciplines use different styles. Using the wrong style—or inconsistent formatting—can cost you marks or lead to desk rejection from journals.

Quick Reference: Which Citation Style Should You Use?

Style

Primary Fields

System Type

Current Edition

APA

Psychology, Education, Social Sciences

Author-Date

7th (2019)

MLA

Literature, Languages, Humanities

Author-Page

9th (2021)

Chicago

History, Arts, Publishing

Notes or Author-Date

18th (2024)

Harvard

UK/Australian Universities (all fields)

Author-Date

Varies by institution

IEEE

Engineering, Computer Science

Numbered

Updated 2025

AMA

Medicine, Health Sciences

Numbered (superscript)

11th (2020)

Vancouver

Biomedical Sciences, Nursing

Numbered

ICMJE/NLM

Turabian

Student Papers, Theses

Notes or Author-Date

9th (2018)

ACS

Chemistry, Biochemistry

Numbered

2020

ASA

Sociology, Criminology

Author-Date

7th (2022)

Bluebook

Law, Legal Studies

Numbered footnotes

22nd (2025)

Not sure? Check your assignment guidelines or journal's author instructions. When in doubt, ask your instructor.

The Two Main Citation Systems

Author-Date Systems

You cite sources with the author's name and publication year in parentheses: (Smith 2023). The reference list is alphabetized.

Styles using this system: APA, Harvard, ASA, Chicago (one option), Turabian (one option)

Numbered Systems

You cite sources with numbers—either in brackets [1] or superscript¹. The reference list follows citation order, not alphabetical order.

Styles using this system: IEEE, AMA, Vancouver, ACS, Bluebook, Chicago (one option)

Citation Styles by Field

Sciences

  • Psychology & Social SciencesAPA

  • ChemistryACS

  • Engineering & Computer ScienceIEEE

  • Medicine & HealthAMA or Vancouver

Humanities

Social Sciences

  • SociologyASA

  • General Social SciencesAPA

Professional Fields

  • LawBluebook

  • Business → Usually APA or Harvard

By Region

  • UK & AustraliaHarvard (most common)

  • US → Varies by discipline

  • Medical journals worldwideVancouver

What Every Citation Includes

Regardless of style, citations typically require:

For books: Author, title, publisher, year

For journal articles: Author, article title, journal name, volume, issue, pages, DOI

For websites: Author (if any), page title, site name, URL, access date (some styles)

The difference between styles is how you format and arrange these elements.

Common Citation Mistakes

Using the wrong style — Always verify requirements before you start writing.

Inconsistent formatting — Mixing styles or formats within a paper is a red flag.

Missing DOIs — Most styles now require DOIs for journal articles when available.

Forgetting in-text citations — Every source in your reference list needs at least one in-text citation, and vice versa.

Relying solely on generators — Citation tools make errors. Always verify output against official guidelines.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between a citation and a reference? A citation is the brief in-text marker (like "(Smith 2023)" or "[1]"). A reference is the full entry in your reference list with complete source details.

Can I switch citation styles mid-paper? No. Use one style consistently throughout your entire document.

Do I need to cite common knowledge? No. Facts that are widely known and uncontested (e.g., "Water freezes at 0°C") don't require citations. When in doubt, cite.

How do I cite a source I found in another source? This is called a secondary citation. Most styles have specific formats—search your style guide for "secondary source" or "as cited in."

What if my source is missing information? Each style has rules for missing authors, dates, or other elements. Check the specific guide for your style.

Citation Tools and Resources

Official style manuals — Always the authoritative source. Links provided in each guide above.

University library guides — Most libraries publish free guides tailored to their institution.

Reference managers — Tools like Zotero, Mendeley, and EndNote can help organize sources and generate citations (but always verify output).

Research workspaces — Platforms like Wonders help you find, organize, and cite academic sources in one place.

Next Steps

  1. Identify your required style from your assignment or target journal

  2. Read the specific guide for that style (linked in the table above)

  3. Bookmark the official manual for reference

  4. Set up your reference manager with the correct output style

  5. Verify your citations before submission

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