APA references follow a four-part pattern—author, date, title, source—then small tweaks based on the item you’re citing.
If APA style trips you up, it’s rarely the big idea. It’s the tiny details: an ampersand in one spot, a period in another, a missing italic. The good news is that APA references run on repeatable patterns. Once you learn the pattern, you stop guessing.
This guide shows how to cite references APA style in a way that holds up in class papers, reports, and theses. You’ll get a clear checklist, fill-in templates, and “spot the issue” fixes for the mistakes that cost points.
What An APA Reference Needs Every Time
Most reference entries in APA 7 fit into the same skeleton. Think in four chunks, in this order:
- Author — Who made it?
- Date — When was it published?
- Title — What’s it called?
- Source — Where can a reader retrieve it?
The “source” chunk is where the item type starts to matter: a journal name and DOI, a publisher for a book, or a site name and URL for a web page.
| Source Type | Core Pieces To Gather | Notes That Change Formatting |
|---|---|---|
| Journal article | Author(s), year, article title, journal title, volume(issue), pages or article number, DOI/URL | Journal title and volume are italic; DOI is preferred when available |
| Book (print) | Author(s), year, book title, publisher | Book title is italic; no city/state in APA 7 |
| Book chapter (edited book) | Chapter author(s), year, chapter title, editor(s), book title, pages, publisher | Editors go in parentheses after “In”; page range uses “pp.” |
| Web page on a site | Author or group, full date, page title, site name, URL | If date is missing, use (n.d.); omit site name if it matches author |
| News article online | Author(s), full date, article title, outlet name, URL | Outlet name is italic; include month and day |
| Report (gov/agency/org) | Group author, year, report title, report number (if any), publisher, URL | If publisher matches group author, skip the publisher field |
| Thesis or dissertation | Author, year, title, type of work, institution, database or URL | Label the work in brackets, like [Master’s thesis] |
| YouTube video | Channel or creator, date, title, format label, site, URL | Add [Video] after the title; creator name may be the channel |
| Podcast episode | Host or producer, date, episode title, format label, show title, publisher, URL | Add [Audio podcast episode]; show title is italic |
How To Cite References APA In Text
APA uses an author–date system. You cite a source twice: once in the sentence (in-text), and once in the reference list. The in-text part points to the full entry.
Parenthetical And Narrative Citations
Use parenthetical citations when the author isn’t part of your sentence. Use narrative citations when the author name flows in the sentence.
- Parenthetical: (Lopez, 2022)
- Narrative: Lopez (2022) found that …
One Author, Two Authors, Three Or More Authors
These patterns cover most papers:
- 1 author: (Nguyen, 2021)
- 2 authors: (Nguyen & Patel, 2021)
- 3+ authors: (Nguyen et al., 2021)
Match the spelling and accents of the author’s last name as printed in the source. Keep capitalization steady too. That consistency helps when a reader checks your reference list.
Page Numbers And Other Locators
Page numbers show up when you quote or point to a specific slice of a work. Add the locator after the year:
- Quote with page: (Khan, 2020, p. 47)
- Multiple pages: (Khan, 2020, pp. 47–49)
- Web page with section: (Khan, 2020, “Methods” section)
Reference List Setup That Instructors Expect
Your references page is a list of full entries that match your in-text citations. A simple setup routine keeps you from chasing formatting points at the end.
Placement, Spacing, And Hanging Indent
- Start the reference list on a new page titled References.
- Use double spacing for every entry unless your course rules say otherwise.
- Apply a hanging indent: first line flush left, the next lines indented.
Alphabetizing Rules
Sort entries by the first author’s last name. If an entry has a group author, alphabetize by the group name. If you have two works by the same author, sort by year, earliest first.
Missing Pieces: No Date, No Author, No Page Numbers
Real sources are messy. APA still gives you a clean way to write the entry:
- No date: Use (n.d.) in the date spot.
- No author: Move the title into the author spot.
- No page numbers: Use a section name, heading, paragraph number, or timestamp if available.
When you’re unsure, compare your source to a matching sample from the official
APA Style reference examples
page and mirror the pattern.
Templates You Can Copy And Fill In
Templates are the fastest path to consistent punctuation. Copy one line, paste it into your draft, then replace each placeholder with your source details.
Journal Article Template
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Year). Title of the article. Title of Journal, Volume(Issue), page range or article number. https://doi.org/xxxxx
Book Template
Author, A. A. (Year). Title of the book (Edition if given). Publisher.
Chapter In An Edited Book Template
Author, A. A. (Year). Title of chapter. In E. E. Editor (Ed.), Title of book (pp. xx–xx). Publisher.
Web Page Template
Author, A. A. (Year, Month Day). Title of page. Site Name. URL
Report Template
Group Author. (Year). Title of report (Report No. xxx). Publisher. URL
Title Capitalization And Italics In APA References
APA reference titles use sentence case most of the time. That means you capitalize the first word of the title, the first word after a colon, and proper nouns. Journal titles keep their own capitalization, often printed in title case by the publisher.
Italics follow a pattern too:
- Italicize the journal title and volume number.
- Italicize the book title and report title.
- Do not italicize the article title or chapter title.
DOIs And URLs: When To Use Which
A DOI is a stable identifier for many journal articles and some reports. When your source has a DOI, use it in URL form (starting with https://doi.org/). If there’s no DOI, use a working URL for online items.
Keep URLs tidy. Remove tracking parameters when you can. If a link is long, paste it as printed, then open it once to confirm it loads.
How To Cite References APA For Websites And Online Articles
Web sources are where most students lose time. The fix is to capture details before you start typing punctuation.
Quick Capture List For A Web Source
- Who wrote it (person or group)
- Full publication date
- Title of the page
- Site name (if it differs from the author)
- Direct URL of the page
Group Authors And Site Names
If the author is a group, use the group name in the author spot. If the site name matches that group, drop the site name to avoid repetition.
Web Pages That Change Over Time
Some pages update often. If the content is designed to change and there’s no stable date, APA may use a retrieval date for that case. Before you add one, check the official guidance on
webpage reference formats
and match the closest pattern.
Quotations, Paraphrases, And Plagiarism Traps
Citing is about two things: giving credit and letting readers locate the source. You cite when you quote, paraphrase, or borrow a data point, chart, image, or method.
Quoting With Care
For a short quote, include author, year, and page number. For a long quote, your instructor may ask for a block quote format in the paper body. The reference list entry stays the same either way.
Paraphrasing That Still Needs A Citation
Paraphrasing means you rephrase a source in your own words. The idea still came from somewhere, so it still needs an author–date citation. A page number can help a reader find the exact spot, yet APA does not demand page numbers for every paraphrase.
Common Fixes When Your Reference Looks Off
When a reference entry feels wrong, it’s often one of these issues:
- Author names are out of order or initials are missing.
- The date is not in parentheses, or the year shows up later in the entry.
- The title is in title case when APA expects sentence case.
- Italics are on the wrong chunk (often the article title).
- DOI is written as “doi:” instead of a full https://doi.org/ link.
- A database link was used when a DOI or public URL fits better.
A Fast Debug Routine
- Identify the source type (article, book, chapter, web page, report).
- Write the four chunks: author, date, title, source.
- Add type-specific parts (issue number, editors, report number, DOI).
- Compare to a matching sample and mirror punctuation.
- Check each in-text citation has a matching reference entry, and vice versa.
Reference Examples You Can Model
Below are sample entries you can use as a visual check. They’re not meant to match your sources word-for-word, so swap in your details.
| Type | Model Reference Entry | In-Text Pattern |
|---|---|---|
| Journal article with DOI | Lee, M. J. (2023). Title of the article. Journal Name, 18(2), 44–61. https://doi.org/xxxxx | (Lee, 2023) |
| Book | Rivera, T. (2020). Title of the book. Publisher. | (Rivera, 2020) |
| Chapter in edited book | Patel, R. (2021). Chapter title. In K. Stone (Ed.), Book title (pp. 15–33). Publisher. | (Patel, 2021) |
| Web page | Health Agency. (2024, May 6). Page title in sentence case. Site Name. URL | (Health Agency, 2024) |
| Report with number | City Office. (2022). Report title (Report No. 17). URL | (City Office, 2022) |
| YouTube video | Channel Name. (2022, July 14). Video title in sentence case [Video]. YouTube. URL | (Channel Name, 2022) |
Mini Checklist Before You Submit
Run this right before you turn in your work. It catches most formatting slips in under two minutes.
- Every in-text citation has a matching item in the references list.
- Every reference list item is cited in the text.
- Author names and years match in both places.
- Titles are in sentence case where APA expects it.
- Journal titles, volume numbers, and book titles are italic.
- DOIs use the https://doi.org/ format when present.
- Hanging indent is applied across the whole references page.
If you still feel stuck on a tricky source type, pick the closest match from the official examples, copy its punctuation pattern, then swap in your details. That one move saves more time than hunting random formatting tips.
While you draft, keep a private note in your doc that says “how to cite references apa” right above your references page. It nudges you to keep the two-part system (in-text plus references) in sync. Delete that note before you submit.