APA-style subheadings use five ordered levels of bold, italics, alignment, and indentation to show how sections nest.
Headings aren’t decoration. They’re signposts that let a reader skim, pause, and jump back in without losing the thread. In APA papers, subheadings also show your structure at a glance.
Below you’ll learn the five heading levels, how to pick the right number of levels for your paper, and how to keep formatting consistent in Word or Google Docs.
What Subheadings Do In APA Papers
Subheadings split a long argument into sections with one job each. That helps your reader, and it helps you while drafting. When you can name the job of a section, you can spot drift fast.
APA headings are hierarchical. A higher level introduces a broad section. A lower level narrows the scope inside it. The formatting is the map: centered vs. left-aligned, bold vs. bold italic, plus whether the section starts on a new line or continues as part of the same paragraph.
Where Subheadings Fit In A Research Paper
Many student papers use Level 1 headings only. Longer papers often need Level 2 headings to break up major sections. Level 3 or Level 4 can help in literature reviews and reports where one section contains several distinct parts.
The first lines of your paper’s main text usually start without a heading labeled “Introduction.” Your title sits at the top, then you begin writing. Your first heading marks the next major section.
If your course requires a specific layout, follow the course directions first. APA rules set formatting patterns, yet instructors can set section expectations for an assignment.
APA Research Paper Subheadings With A Clean Level Plan
Pick the smallest number of levels that still makes the paper easy to scan. Add another level only when a section truly contains multiple parts that need labels.
Think of each level as a container. A Level 1 heading holds a major section. A Level 2 heading breaks that section into parts. Level 3 breaks one of those parts into smaller units, and so on. If a section can’t be split in a meaningful way, keep it at the higher level.
Keep headings parallel. If one Level 2 heading is a noun phrase, keep the rest as noun phrases. Parallel wording makes your outline feel steady.
How Many Levels You Need
Use as few levels as you can. A short paper with four levels tends to look cramped. Most writers land on two or three levels.
Try this test: read only your headings in order. If they form a clear mini-outline, you’ve used enough levels. If a section has only one short paragraph, it often doesn’t need its own subheading.
How Headings Tie Back To Your Thesis
Your thesis answers a question. Your headings show the route you take to back it up. If headings drift away from the thesis, the paper can feel like a stack of notes.
Under each heading, write one sentence that states what the section will do. If you can’t state the job in one sentence, the section may be doing too much.
Formatting Rules For The Five APA Heading Levels
APA Style uses five heading levels, each with a specific look. The official chart appears on the APA Style “Headings” rule page.
Level 1 Heading
Centered, bold, title case. Start the text on the next line as a new paragraph.
Level 2 Heading
Flush left, bold, title case. Start the text on the next line as a new paragraph.
Level 3 Heading
Flush left, bold italic, title case. Start the text on the next line as a new paragraph.
Level 4 Heading
Indented, bold, title case, ending with a period. Keep writing on the same line.
Level 5 Heading
Indented, bold italic, title case, ending with a period. Keep writing on the same line.
Copy-Friendly Examples
Level 1:Results
Level 2:Participant Criteria
Level 3:Screening Steps
Level 4:Primary outcome. The paragraph continues right after the heading.
Level 5:Secondary outcome. Continue the paragraph on the same line.
Table Of Common Paper Parts And Heading Levels
Use this table as a planning shortcut. It maps common sections to levels, then notes when a lower level makes sense.
| Paper Part | Typical Level | When To Add A Lower Level |
|---|---|---|
| Method | Level 1 | Add Level 2 when the method has distinct components. |
| Participants | Level 2 | Add Level 3 when eligibility rules need grouping. |
| Materials Or Measures | Level 2 | Add Level 3 when measures split into instruments. |
| Procedure | Level 2 | Add Level 3 when the procedure has phases. |
| Results | Level 1 | Add Level 2 for each research question or model. |
| Descriptive Statistics | Level 2 | Add Level 3 if you report multiple groups. |
| Interpretation | Level 1 | Add Level 2 when you handle separate themes or claims. |
| Limitations | Level 2 | Add Level 3 when limits fall into clear categories. |
| Implications | Level 2 | Add Level 3 when you separate practice and research ideas. |
Choosing Subheadings For Common Assignment Types
APA formatting shows hierarchy, yet your section names should match the kind of paper you’re writing. If you’re unsure what to call a section, name it after the task it performs.
Literature Review
A literature review usually needs more headings than a short report because it groups sources by theme, method, or time period. Start with Level 1 headings that match your main themes. Use Level 2 headings for narrower groupings, like “Measurement Approaches” or “Findings By Age Group.”
Avoid headings that are only author names or years. A reader wants to know what the section is about, not who wrote the studies inside it.
Empirical Research Report
Empirical papers often follow a familiar flow: Method, Results, and an interpretation section. Inside Method, Level 2 headings like Participants, Materials, and Procedure keep the reader oriented. Inside Results, Level 2 headings can track your research questions, each with the relevant stats and short explanation.
If one results subsection includes many related tests, add Level 3 headings for the test families. Keep the labels descriptive so a reader can skim and still understand what was tested.
Argument Or Position Paper
In argument papers, headings can mirror the structure of your reasoning. Use Level 1 headings for your main claims. Use Level 2 headings for the evidence types you use to back each claim, like “Survey Evidence” or “Policy Comparison.”
When you include counterarguments, give them a clear label. That signals you’re handling objections on purpose, not as an afterthought.
Headings That Stay Readable On Screen And On Paper
Headings help most when they’re specific. Labels like “Background” or “Analysis” can be so broad that they hide what the section does. Try adding one extra word that pins down the topic, like “Background On Sampling” or “Analysis Of Response Rates.”
Keep headings short enough to scan. If a heading runs longer than one line, tighten it. Long headings also make the document outline harder to use.
Be consistent with word choice. If you call something “Participants” in one place, don’t switch to “Sample” in another unless the meaning truly changes. Consistent labels reduce mental load for the reader.
How To Build Your Heading Outline Before Drafting
Start with a bare outline. Write your Level 1 headings as the major tasks your paper must complete. Under each Level 1 heading, list Level 2 headings that break the task into chunks that can stand on their own.
Draft each section in place. If a section grows and starts juggling two ideas, split it with a lower level heading. If a section stays small, merge it back into the parent section.
A Three-Step Section Pattern
- Open with one sentence that states the job of the section.
- Add evidence and explanation until the job is done.
- Close with one sentence that points to the next section.
Common Heading Mistakes And Fixes
These are the problems instructors spot most often.
Skipping Levels
Don’t jump from Level 1 to Level 3. Add the missing level, or promote the lower heading to the correct level.
Headings That Don’t Match The Text
A heading is a promise. If the text under it shifts topics, rewrite the heading to match the section’s job, or move the text to the section where it belongs.
Formatting Drift
Fix drift with Styles. Correct the style once, then reapply it across the document so each heading at that level updates together.
Applying Heading Styles In Word And Google Docs
Built-in heading styles create an outline view that makes big edits easier. Modify the styles once to match APA formatting, then apply them consistently instead of formatting headings by hand.
Run-in headings (Levels 4 and 5) need a first-line indent and must stay on the same line as the paragraph text after the period.
Table Of Quick Fixes For Heading Problems
Use this when your headings look “off” and you want a direct fix.
| Issue | What Caused It | What To Do |
|---|---|---|
| Level 2 headings look centered | Wrong alignment or wrong style | Set Level 2 to flush left, bold, then reapply. |
| Run-in heading sits on its own line | Enter pressed after the heading | Delete the line break and keep writing on the same line. |
| Heading levels look out of order in the outline | Styles applied inconsistently | Promote or demote headings until nesting looks right. |
| Headings repeat the same wording | Sections overlap | Rename each heading for one distinct job, or merge sections. |
| Capitalization differs across a level | Title case applied unevenly | Edit headings by hand and match capitalization across the set. |
| Too many tiny subheadings in one area | Ideas split too finely | Combine related parts and keep one heading for the larger chunk. |
Fast Checks Before You Submit
Read only your headings as a final pass. Then open your document outline and confirm the nesting matches your plan. If you want a second reference on heading order, see Purdue OWL’s APA headings and seriation page.
References & Sources
- APA Style.“Headings.”Official rules for the five APA heading levels and their formatting.
- Purdue Online Writing Lab (OWL), Purdue University.“APA Headings and Seriation.”Explanation of heading order, nesting, and section structure in APA papers.