An APA photo citation lists the creator, date, image title, format, and source, paired with an author–date in-text credit.
Using a photo in academic writing can strengthen your point fast. It can also create an easy grading trap: a photo with no clear credit, a mismatched in-text citation, or a reference entry that leaves readers guessing where the image came from.
This article shows you exactly how to cite photos in APA 7. You’ll get fill-in templates, clean examples, and a few sanity checks that catch the mistakes instructors mark down most.
What APA Expects When You Use A Photo
APA treats a photo as an image with a creator and a source. The source can be a website, a social media post, a museum record, a database, or a printed publication. Your job is to help a reader locate the same image, then credit it the same way in text and in the reference list.
How you use the image changes the formatting:
- Mentioned but not shown: you need an in-text citation and a reference list entry.
- Inserted into your paper: you still cite it, and you also label it as a figure with a caption and a note.
How To Cite A Photo In APA With The Core Pieces
Most photo citations are built from the same blocks, in this order:
- Creator (photographer, artist, organization, or username)
- Date (year, or year-month-day if shown)
- Title (or a short bracketed description if there’s no title)
- Format in brackets (often [Photograph])
- Source (site/platform name, museum name, book/report title)
- URL (when the image is online)
Reference List Template For An Online Photo
Last name, Initials. (Year, Month Day). Title of photo [Photograph]. Site Name. URL
In-Text Citation Template
- Parenthetical: (Creator, Year)
- Narrative: Creator (Year)
Use the same creator name in both places. If the account name is a username, keep it consistent across your paper.
Fixing Missing Details Without Guessing
Many photos online are missing at least one piece of info. APA gives workable substitutions, as long as you don’t invent facts.
When The Photo Has No Title
Write a brief description in square brackets where the title would go. Keep it specific.
Lee, J. (2022). [Street market at dusk] [Photograph]. Site Name. URL
When There’s No Date
Use n.d. in the date slot. Some instructors also require a retrieval date for undated web content. If your rubric asks for it, place “Retrieved Month Day, Year, from” before the URL.
When No Person Is Credited
If an organization clearly owns the page and presents the image as its content, use the organization as author. If there’s no clear author at all, move the title (or bracketed description) into the author position.
When A Photo Is Embedded In A Web Page
If your writing is about the photo itself, cite the photo as the item. If you’re using the page’s written content and the image is just decoration, cite the page instead. APA’s web page reference examples give the baseline pattern for author, date, title, and URL. Webpage on a website references is a solid pattern check.
Citing Photos You Insert As Figures
When you place a photo in your document, treat it as a figure. Each figure needs:
- A figure number (Figure 1, Figure 2, …)
- A caption title (italic, sentence case)
- A note that credits the source and covers rights wording when needed
Sample Figure Caption And Note
Figure 1
Morning fog over the river
Note. From Morning fog over the river [Photograph], by R. Diaz, 2021, Flickr (URL). Copyright 2021 by R. Diaz.
For classroom assignments, instructors often accept a short note like the one above. For public publication, you may need a tighter rights statement tied to the license or permission letter.
Common Photo Sources And The Matching Formats
The creator–date–title–format core stays the same. The “source” element changes based on where you found the image.
Photo From A Photo-Sharing Platform
Creator. (Year, Month Day). Title [Photograph]. Platform Name. URL
Use the platform’s name as the source (Flickr, SmugMug, or a similar host) and link to the photo’s page, not a search results screen.
Photo From A Social Media Post
Account Name. (Year, Month Day). First words of caption [Photograph]. Platform Name. URL
If the caption is long, you only need the opening words. If there’s no caption, use a bracketed description as the title.
Photo From A Museum Or Gallery Page
Artist, Initials. (Year). Title of work [Photograph]. Museum Name, City, Country. URL
This format is common for artworks, archival photos, and collection records. Use the museum’s catalog page as the URL when it exists.
Photo In A Book Or Report
If a photo appears inside a book or report, the publication becomes the source element. If you reproduce the photo as a figure, your figure note should also point to the page number where the image appears.
Stock Photos And Clip Art
Stock images can be cited like other online photos when you’re directing readers to the original page. When you reproduce stock art in your paper, license terms decide what your figure note must say. APA’s own examples cover stock and clip art cases, including situations where an in-text citation is used instead of a full reference entry. Clip art or stock images references is the cleanest authority checkpoint for these edge cases.
Fast Formats Table For Real Assignment Scenarios
This table shows what to write for common sources. Keep the pattern, swap the source element.
| Scenario | Reference Entry Pattern | What To Add If You Reproduce It |
|---|---|---|
| Photo on a personal site page | Creator. (Date). Title [Photograph]. Site Name. URL | Figure number + caption + note with source |
| Flickr or similar host | Creator. (Date). Title [Photograph]. Platform Name. URL | Note with platform + direct URL |
| Social media post | Account. (Date). Caption start [Photograph]. Platform Name. URL | Note that points to the post URL |
| Museum collection record | Artist. (Year). Title [Photograph]. Museum, City, Country. URL | Note may need rights line, based on reuse rules |
| Book chapter image | Photographer. (Year). Title [Photograph]. In A. Editor (Ed.), Book title (p. xx). Publisher. | Note with “In … (p. xx)” plus rights wording if required |
| Organization report PDF | Agency. (Year). Title [Photograph]. In Report title (p. xx). Publisher. URL | Note with report title + page number |
| Your own photo | No reference entry unless your instructor requires it | Figure number + caption is usually enough |
| Screenshot you captured | Cite the original source you captured from | Note should name the source and date shown on the source |
Writing A Figure Note That Stays Clean
A figure note can be one sentence. Build it from the same details you used in the reference entry:
Note. From Title [Photograph], by Creator, Year, Site Name (URL). Copyright Year by Copyright Holder.
If the image is shared under a Creative Commons license, your note often needs the license name and a link to that license. If rights are unclear, cite the image but avoid reproducing it unless your instructor says it’s allowed.
Keeping In-Text Citations, Captions, And References In Sync
Most APA photo mistakes are simple mismatches. Use these checks:
- The in-text creator + year matches the first part of the reference entry.
- The figure note points to the same URL or publication that you listed as the source.
- If you use a username as the author, you use it the same way in every citation spot.
Write the reference entry first. Then copy the creator and year into your in-text citation. Then draft the figure note from the same entry. It keeps the paper consistent without extra effort.
Table For When A Citation Detail Is Missing
Use this table when you’re stuck with a real image and a half-complete credit line.
| Missing Detail | What To Use | Where It Appears |
|---|---|---|
| No title | Short description in square brackets | Title slot in the reference entry |
| No date | n.d. (add retrieval date if required by your course) | Date slot in the reference entry |
| No credited person | Organization as author, or move title to author slot | Author slot and in-text citation |
| No stable URL | Permalink, DOI, catalog record link, or database record link | URL slot |
| Screenshot | Original source you captured from | Reference entry and figure note |
| Your own photo | Caption only unless your rubric asks for more | Figure caption area |
| Unknown rights status | Cite the source; avoid reproducing without clear permission | Figure use decision, not the reference entry |
Citing Your Own Photos And Coursework Images
If you took the photo yourself, you usually do not need a reference list entry, because you are the creator and the source. In most class papers, a figure number and a caption are enough. If your instructor wants a full citation, treat your photo like an unpublished work and follow your course rules for personal communications or classroom materials.
Two extra checks help when your photo includes people or private property:
- Consent: your school may require a signed release if a person is identifiable.
- Context: write a caption that tells the reader what the photo shows and why it matters in your paper.
If you edited the image (cropped, adjusted color, added labels), you can mention that in the figure note with a short phrase like “Edited by the author.” Keep the citation to the original source if the photo is not yours.
Last Pass Before Submission
- Every photo you inserted has a figure number, caption, and note.
- Every photo you mentioned has an in-text citation.
- Every in-text citation has a matching reference entry.
- Every URL opens to the page a reader can use to locate the image.
Once you’ve done this a couple of times, citing photos becomes a repeatable habit: capture details, write the reference entry, then mirror it in text and under the figure.
References & Sources
- APA Style.“Webpage on a website references.”Pattern examples for author, date, title, and URL when citing web pages that may host images.
- APA Style.“Clip art or stock images references.”Official examples for citing and crediting stock images and clip art, including common classroom-use scenarios.