Skip to Main Content

APA Citation 7th Edition

Webpage on a website with a group author

In-text citation: (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2022)

Reference list: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2022, October 24). Key facts about influenza (flu)https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/keyfacts.htm

In the event of the author and website sharing the same name, please omit the site name from the publisher section. 

Webpage on a website with an individual author

In-text citation: (Waelde, 2018)

Reference List: Waelde, L.C. (2018). Inner resources center training programs. Inner Resources Center. https://www.paloaltou.edu/sites/default/files/Inner%20Resources%20Center%20%282018%29%20%281%29.pdf

Webpage without a publication date

In-text citation: (The Trevor Project, n.d.)

Reference list: The Trevor Project. (n.d.). Navigating LGBTQ identities and religionhttps://www.thetrevorproject.org/resources/article/navigating-lgbtq-identities-and-religion/

In the event of the author and website sharing the same name, please omit the site name from the publisher section. 

Wikipedia

In-text citation:("Ship's cat," 2022)

Reference list: 
Ship's cat. (2022, November 7). In Wikipediahttps://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ship%27s_cat&oldid=1120574663


An entry for Wikipedia must include the archived version of the page you're referencing. To do this, navigate to the Wikipedia page and select "View history" in the upper-right hand corner, then the time and date of the version you accessed. In the event of there not being permanent links available to the archived version of the page, please include the URL for the entry and its retrieval date.

 

Webpage on a news website

In-text citation: (Holmes, 2022)

Reference list: Holmes, M. (2022, November 29). What you need to know about getting pregnant with polycystic ovary syndrome. HuffPost. https://www.huffpost.com/entry/pregnant-polycystic-ovary-syndrome_l_6384cf5de4b0e4c775952890


News sources that are published on news websites without serialized papers--such as CNN, HuffPost, BBC News--follow a different format than news sources that contain daily or weekly newspapers. To see examples of citing online newspaper or magazine articles, please review the APA Style section or consult the Newspapers, magazines, and blogs tab on the left.