In APA Style, build a journal reference with author, year, article title, journal name, volume(issue), page range, and a DOI or URL.
Need a no-nonsense walk-through for citing a peer-reviewed journal source in APA Style (7th ed.)? You’re in the right spot. This guide shows the parts you need, how they fit together, and the exact punctuation that makes the entry pass a quick scan by any instructor or editor. You’ll also see sample in-text citations and edge-case fixes, all in one place.
Citing A Peer-Reviewed Journal Article In APA Style: Quick Steps
APA references run on four building blocks: Author, Date, Title, and Source. For journal work, the Source includes the periodical title, volume, issue (if any), page range, and a DOI or a working URL. The official guidance calls this the author–date system with a reference list entry that mirrors the in-text callout. APA’s pages confirm the four-element model and show many journal variations, including missing data and article numbers. See APA’s elements of a reference and the full set of journal article reference examples.
Core Template For Journals
Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (Year). Title of the article: Subtitle if any. Title of Journal, Volume(Issue), Page–Page. https://doi.org/xxxxx
Why The DOI Matters
APA favors a DOI in URL form (https://doi.org/...) when available. When a DOI is present, include it at the end of the entry. If there’s no DOI and the piece came from a platform without a stable URL, end after the page range. APA’s DOI and URL guidance lays out these rules clearly.
Reference Elements And How To Format Them
Use this table as your fast checklist before you paste a citation into your paper. It compresses the rules you’ll use most often for peer-reviewed work.
| Element | What Goes Here | APA 7 Formatting Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Author | Last name, initials for each given name; list up to 20, then an ellipsis and the final author | Use commas between names and “&” before the last; keep author order from the article |
| Date | Publication year in parentheses | Year only for most journals; add month/day only if the journal uses them |
| Title | Article title in sentence case; include subtitle after a colon | No quotes; capitalize only the first word, proper nouns, and the first word after a colon |
| Source | Journal name, volume, issue (if any), page range | Journal in title case and italics; volume italic; issue in parentheses (not italic); use an en dash in page spans |
| DOI / URL | DOI as a https link; else a live URL when needed | Use https://doi.org/xxxxx; no period after live links; include only one of DOI or URL |
Clean Samples You Can Model
Single Author, With DOI
Park, J. S. (2023). Motivation and task design in online labs. Journal of Digital Learning, 17(2), 145–162. https://doi.org/10.1234/jdl.2023.4567
Two Authors, With Issue And Pages
Lopez, R., & Chen, M. (2022). Team dynamics in remote internships. Workplace Studies, 29(4), 233–249. https://doi.org/10.5678/ws.29.4.233
Three To Twenty Authors
Nguyen, T., Patel, K., & Rivera, S. (2021). Data literacy across majors. Higher Education Review, 58(1), 19–38. https://doi.org/10.2468/her.58.1.19
More Than Twenty Authors
List the first 19, then an ellipsis, then the final author’s name. No ampersand before the ellipsis.
First, A. A., Second, B. B., Third, C. C., ... Last, Z. Z. (2024). Multi-site replication across labs. Open Methods, 12(3), 1–12. https://doi.org/10.9999/om.12.3.1
Advance Online Publication Or Article Number
Many journals use article numbers instead of pages. Keep the same order and include the article number where the page range would go.
Farahani, L., & Ortiz, P. (2024). Sensor fusion on edge devices. Computing Science Letters, 45(1), Article e01987. https://doi.org/10.2222/csl.2024.e01987
No DOI, Widely Available In Print Or Database
End after the page range when the work is easy to find in many academic databases and has no DOI.
Abbott, D. (2020). Coaching notes in graduate seminars. Pedagogy Quarterly, 11(2), 75–88.
In-Text Citations That Match The Reference
APA uses the author–date callout. You’ll use either a parenthetical citation or a narrative form. The APA page on parenthetical versus narrative explains this choice and shows more samples.
Parenthetical Form
Place the author and year in parentheses at the end of the sentence: (Lopez & Chen, 2022). Add a page or paragraph marker for quotations: (Lopez & Chen, 2022, p. 240).
Narrative Form
Work the author into the sentence, with the year right after the name: Lopez and Chen (2022) found that onboarding plans increase retention. For quotations, add a page after the quote: Lopez and Chen (2022, p. 240).
Three Or More Authors In Text
Shorten to the first author plus “et al.” after the first mention: Nguyen et al. (2021) or (Nguyen et al., 2021).
Same Author, Same Year
Label the year with letters in the reference list and match them in text: Rivera, 2020a; Rivera, 2020b.
Group Author
On first use, spell out the group and add the abbreviation in brackets; later uses can use the short form. Example: (American Nurses Association [ANA], 2021), then (ANA, 2021).
Punctuation, Capitalization, And Italics That Save You From Fix-Ups
Title Case Vs. Sentence Case
Journal titles use title case and italics. Article titles use sentence case with no italics and no quotes. Capitalize the first word of the title and the first word after a colon.
Volume, Issue, And Pages
Put the volume in italics right after the journal. Add the issue in parentheses without italics. Then include the page span with an en dash.
Comma And Period Placement
Place a period after the year parenthesis, after the article title, and after the page range. Do not end with a period after a DOI or URL.
Edge Cases You’ll See With Scholarly Work
Missing Author
Move the title to the author spot and keep the rest of the pattern: Title of article. (Year). Journal, Volume(Issue), pages. https://doi.org/...
Missing Date
Use (n.d.) in place of the year.
Translated Titles
Add the English title in square brackets after the original title if the article is in another language.
Retractions And Corrections
Cite the retraction or correction notice directly. APA’s example set includes these cases on its journal page.
Database Access, Open Web Links, And When To Stop
With journals, a DOI ends the trail. If there’s no DOI and the piece lives behind common academic databases, skip the URL. If the journal assigns a working URL or you used an open-web version from the publisher, add that link. APA’s DOI and URL page covers each scenario with side-by-side samples.
Quick Fixes For Common Mistakes
Use this second table as a troubleshooting map when a checker flags your entry. Each row pairs a frequent error with a quick repair and a model line.
| Problem | Fix | Model |
|---|---|---|
| Title in Title Case | Switch to sentence case; keep journal in title case | ... (2023). Growth patterns in seedlings. Botany Reports, ... |
| Missing DOI | Add the https://doi.org/ link if present in the record |
... 12(3), 210–222. https://doi.org/10.0000/abc.12345 |
| Issue Number Styled Wrong | Move issue to parentheses; drop italics | 28(4), not 28(4) |
| Period After URL | Remove trailing period after live links | ... https://doi.org/10.1000/xyz |
| Too Many Authors | List up to 20; then ellipsis; final author | ... 19th Author, Y., ... 26th Author, Z. |
Workflow: From Database Record To Finished Entry
Step 1: Copy The Raw Metadata
Grab the author list, year, article title, journal title, volume, issue, pages, and DOI from the publisher page or database export.
Step 2: Normalize Names
Convert given names to initials. Keep hyphens and particles as written by the journal. Keep the author order as published.
Step 3: Fix The Title Case
Drop to sentence case for the article. Keep the journal in title case and italics.
Step 4: Assemble The Source Block
Write the journal name, volume in italics, issue in parentheses right after, then the page span. If you see an article number, insert it where the pages would be.
Step 5: Add The DOI Or URL
Search the record for a DOI. If present, paste the full https link. If none exists and you used a public publisher page, paste that URL. If you accessed it by subscription only, stop after the pages.
Matching In-Text Citations To The Reference List
Every entry needs at least one in-text callout. The surname and year must match. For a quotation, add a pinpoint page. For a paraphrase, the page is optional but helps readers find the spot.
Samples
- Paraphrase, one author:
(Park, 2023) - Narrative, two authors:
Lopez and Chen (2022) - Quotation with page:
(Nguyen et al., 2021, p. 24) - Group author later mentions:
(ANA, 2021)
Frequently Seen Variants In Scholarly Sources
Supplement Issues
After the volume, include the supplement label in the issue slot: (Suppl. 1) or the code used by the journal.
Special Sections Or Article Types
If the journal flags a brief report, editorial, or methods note, keep the label only if it appears in the article title. The reference itself keeps the same skeleton.
Preprints And Accepted Manuscripts
Preprints live outside the peer-review record. If you cite one, use the repository as the source and include the persistent link. Do not dress it as a journal item unless it has been published.
Submission-Ready Checklist
- Author names match the article and sit in the right order.
- Year is in parentheses with a period right after.
- Article title uses sentence case; journal title and volume are italic.
- Issue is in parentheses right after the volume, not italic.
- Page range uses an en dash and no spaces around it.
- DOI shown as a live https link; no period after it.
- In-text calls use author–date and match the reference entry.
Why This Matches APA’s Own Pages
This guide tracks APA’s four-element model and the examples library for journals, including pieces with article numbers, many authors, and missing data. The links above go straight to APA’s official pages so you can double-check any edge case without digging through a manual.
Copy-And-Tweak Templates You Can Reuse
Article With A DOI
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Year). Title of the article. Journal Title, Volume(Issue), xx–xx. https://doi.org/xxxxx
Article Without A DOI (Common Database Access)
Author, A. A. (Year). Title of the article. Journal Title, Volume(Issue), xx–xx.
Article With An Article Number
Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (Year). Title of the article. Journal Title, Volume(Issue), Article eXXXX. https://doi.org/xxxxx
One Last Pass Before You Submit
Scan for title case errors, stray periods after links, and issue numbers in italics. Then match each in-text call with its entry. If you want a visual sample of a paper with the reference list formatted to the letter, Purdue OWL hosts a student sample that mirrors APA’s layout.
