How to cite a website — Quick guide (APA, MLA, Chicago)
By Robbie Creates — Published Dec 11, 2025
1 — When and what to cite from a website
Cite a web page when you're referencing ideas, direct quotes, data, or unique content found on a specific page. You can cite an entire site (e.g., a company's homepage) when you reference the organization generally, but for exact wording or data cite the specific page or article URL.
- Essential elements: author (or organization), publication date, page/article title, website name, URL.
- Fallbacks: If no author — start with the title. If no date — use (n.d.). If content is removed later, record the access date or archive the page (Wayback Machine).
2 — APA (7th ed.) — format + example
Format:
- Author, A. A. (Year, Month Day). Title of page. Website Name. URL
Example:
Notes:
- Use the page's byline and published date when available.
- If the author is an organization, put the organization name as author.
- Include retrieval dates only for pages likely to change (e.g., live dashboards).
3 — MLA (9th ed.) — format + example
Format:
- Author. “Title of Page.” Website Name, Day Month Year, URL.
Example:
Notes:
- MLA favors the day-month-year style and places the title in quotes.
- Omit “http(s)://” only if your instructor/style requires—leaving the full URL is accepted and often clearer.
4 — Chicago (Notes & Bibliography) — format + example
Format (bibliography):
- Author Last, First. “Title of Page.” Website Name. Last modified Month Day, Year. URL.
Example:
Notes:
- Chicago often prefers the “last modified” date when a publication date is unclear.
- For footnotes, Chicago uses a slightly different, shorter form—so include the full citation in the bibliography.
5 — Common edge cases & quick rules
- No author: Start the citation with the title, then the date.
- No date: Use (n.d.) in APA or “n.d.” in Chicago; in MLA just omit the date but note access date if required.
- Dynamic or updated pages: Prefer the published or last-modified date; include an access date if the content is likely to change.
- Archived pages: Cite the original URL plus the archive URL (Wayback Machine) and the access date.
- Citing social posts or comments: Follow style-specific rules—treat them like web content with author, full text (or excerpt), date, and URL.
When in doubt, be consistent: pick the style your instructor/publisher requires and apply its rules uniformly across all web citations.
6 — Tools, sources & examples
Use authoritative guides and citation generators to double-check formatting:
- APA Style (official) — official examples and Q&A.
- Purdue OWL — MLA guide — practical examples and templates.
- Chicago Manual of Style (official) — comprehensive rules (subscription-based).
- Wayback Machine — archive pages you cite to prevent link-rot.
Quick generators (Zotero, Mendeley, BibTeX exporters, or citationmachine.net) are great for speed, but always verify the output against the official style guide—automated tools make mistakes with unusual sources.
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