In MLA style, a web page entry lists author, page title, site name, date, and URL, then the in-text citation points to that same author or title.
Citing a website feels simple until the page is missing something. No author. No date. A site name that blends into the header. If you’ve ever patched together a citation from random samples, you’re not alone.
The fix is a method you can reuse. You’ll collect the right details, place them into MLA’s core-element order, and create an in-text citation that matches the first word of the Works Cited entry. Do it once or twice and it becomes muscle memory.
What MLA Style Wants From Website Citations
MLA’s goal is findability. Your reader should be able to locate the same page you used, even if they start with only your Works Cited list. So MLA asks for the facts that identify the page: who wrote it, what it’s called, where it lives online, and when it was published or updated.
MLA’s “core elements” idea also keeps you from guessing. You include what the page gives you, skip what it doesn’t, keep the order steady, and use consistent punctuation. That’s why MLA citations still look clean even when the web is messy.
How Do You Cite A Website In An MLA Paper? With Core Elements
Use this workflow each time you cite a web page. It works for blogs, news sites, museum pages, policy pages, and university handouts.
Step 1: Save The Citation Details While The Page Is Open
Before you write anything, capture the details below from the page itself. Don’t rely on the browser tab title alone. Copy the URL. Record the date as the page shows it.
- Author (person or organization)
- Page title (the page’s headline)
- Website name (the site or publisher)
- Date (publication or last update)
- URL (direct link)
- Access date (use when it helps readers)
Step 2: Write The Works Cited Entry In MLA Order
Most web page entries land in this pattern:
- Author.
- “Title of the page.”
- Website Name,
- Date,
- URL.
- Accessed Day Mon. Year. (Only when you add an access date.)
If you want a reliable template for core elements and punctuation, use the MLA Style Center’s Works Cited: A Quick Guide.
Step 3: Add The Matching In-Text Citation
MLA in-text citations point to the start of the Works Cited entry. For most websites, that’s the author’s last name. If there’s no author, it’s a short form of the page title in quotation marks.
- With author: (Nguyen)
- No author: (“City Budget”)
If you name the author in your sentence, you can often skip the parenthetical for a web page, since there’s no page number to add.
How To Find Author, Site Name, And Date On Real Pages
Most citation mistakes come from misreading the page. Use these checks to keep your entries accurate.
Author Checks That Work
Start near the headline for a byline. If you see a person’s name, that’s your author. If the page credits a group, use the group name. If there’s no byline, scan the footer area for a staff credit or an “About” line. When a page is clearly published by an organization and no person is credited, the organization can serve as author.
Site Name Checks That Prevent Duplicate Titles
The website name is the publisher name that appears across the site, not the headline of one page. If the phrase is repeated in the header on many pages, it’s usually the website name. If it appears only once as a headline, it’s the page title.
Date Checks That Keep You Honest
Use the publication date or last update date shown on the page. If there’s no clear date, skip the date element. Add an access date when the page can change or when the missing date makes the page hard to verify.
MLA explains access-date use in its note on when to include an access date for an online work.
Website Citation Patterns You’ll Use Often
Once you know what to record, most web citations fall into a small set of patterns. Use this table as a decision map while you build your Works Cited list.
| Website Situation | What To Record | How It Shows In Works Cited |
|---|---|---|
| Person credited as author | Author; page title; site name; date; URL | Lastname, Firstname. “Page Title.” Site Name, Date, URL. |
| Organization wrote the page | Organization; page title; site name; date; URL | Organization Name. “Page Title.” Site Name, Date, URL. |
| No author listed | Page title; site name; date; URL | “Page Title.” Site Name, Date, URL. |
| No date listed | Author or title; site name; URL; access date | … URL. Accessed Day Mon. Year. |
| Update date shown | Use the update date you relied on | … Updated Day Mon. Year, URL. |
| Long URL with tracking bits | Remove session IDs and tracking codes when safe | Use a stable URL that still lands on the page. |
| Dynamic page or live data | Best working link plus access date | … URL. Accessed Day Mon. Year. |
| Home page citation | Site name plus URL; date if shown | Site Name, URL. (Add date or access date if you use one.) |
Formatting Details That Make Citations Look Like MLA
These rules keep your citations consistent and keep graders from circling tiny issues.
Title Styling
Put the web page title in quotation marks. Put the website name in italics. This mirrors MLA’s pattern of “part” titles in quotes and “container” titles in italics.
URL And Punctuation
Use a working URL and end it with a period. Don’t add extra spaces. If your word processor wraps the URL onto the next line, leave it alone and avoid manual hyphenation.
Date Format
Write dates as day, abbreviated month, and year, like 6 July 2026. If the page gives only a year, the year alone can stand in.
In-Text Citations For Websites Without Page Numbers
When your website source has no page numbers, MLA still wants a clear pointer from your sentence to the Works Cited entry.
Use Author When You Have One
Put the author’s last name in parentheses: (Lopez). If your sentence already names Lopez, you may not need a parenthetical at all.
Use A Short Title When There’s No Author
Use a short form of the page title in quotation marks: (“Campus Safety Rules”). Keep the first words of the Works Cited entry so the match is instant.
Common Website Citation Errors And Clean Fixes
These are the mistakes that show up most in student papers, along with a quick fix that keeps you within MLA rules.
Mixing Up Page Title And Site Name
If you repeat the headline as the website name, your citation looks doubled. Use the headline as the page title. Use the publisher name as the website name.
Crediting The Wrong Author
A site logo is not always the author. If a page credits a named writer, use that name. If it credits only the organization, use the organization.
Skipping Access Dates When They Help
Access dates are optional in many cases, still they’re useful when a page changes, when there’s no date, or when a reader may see a different version later. If you add one, put it at the end: Accessed Day Mon. Year.
Quick Checks With A Second Table
Run this table before you submit. It catches most MLA website citation issues in under a minute.
| Check | What You Should See | Fix If It’s Off |
|---|---|---|
| Works Cited and in-text match | Parenthetical uses the first word of the entry | Switch to author or a short title that matches the entry start |
| Page title styling | Title in quotation marks | Add quotes and place the period inside the closing quote |
| Website name styling | Site name in italics | Italicize the site name, not the page title |
| Date and month | Day Mon. Year order | Rewrite in MLA order and abbreviate the month where MLA does |
| URL ends cleanly | URL works and ends with a period | Remove tracking bits, test the link, then add the final period |
| Access date placement | Access date at the end when you use one | Add “Accessed Day Mon. Year.” as the last element |
Copy-Ready Templates You Can Paste Then Fill
Paste one of these, then replace the bracketed parts with your source details.
Template With Author And Date
Lastname, Firstname. “Page Title.” Website Name, Day Mon. Year, URL.
Template With No Author
“Page Title.” Website Name, Day Mon. Year, URL.
Template With No Date
Lastname, Firstname. “Page Title.” Website Name, URL. Accessed Day Mon. Year.
Last Pass Before You Turn It In
Scan your paper for each parenthetical citation, then jump to the Works Cited list and confirm there’s a clear match. If the match is instant, your reader can track your sources without guesswork.
Then revisit each cited web page once. If the title or date changed since you saved it, update your citation so your paper stays accurate.
References & Sources
- Modern Language Association (MLA) Style Center.“Works Cited: A Quick Guide.”Shows the core-element template and the order used to build Works Cited entries, including online sources.
- Modern Language Association (MLA) Style Center.“When should I include an access date for an online work?”Explains when access dates add value for readers and when MLA treats them as optional.