UtilitiesTools

Citation Generator

Build a correctly formatted reference in APA 7th, MLA 9th, or Chicago 17th style. Pick your source, fill in the details, and copy the citation in one click — no sign-up, and your source details never leave your browser.

Author(s)

🔒 Built in your browser. Nothing is uploaded or stored.

What is the Citation Generator?

The Citation Generator is a free online tool that turns the details of a source — its author, title, year, publisher, and link — into a correctly formatted reference in APA 7th, MLA 9th, or Chicago 17th edition style. Pick the kind of source you are citing (a website, a book, a journal article, or a newspaper article), fill in the fields that appear, and the formatted citation is built instantly so you can copy it straight into your reference list or works-cited page.

Everything happens in your browser, so the source details you type are never uploaded to a server. That keeps your work private and means the tool stays fast even with no internet once the page has loaded.

How to use it

  1. Choose the source type: Website, Book, Journal Article, or Newspaper.
  2. Fill in the fields that appear for that source — author name, title, year, publisher or journal, page numbers, URL, and so on. Leave blank anything you do not have; the citation still builds with the information you provide.
  3. Pick your citation style, or turn on the side-by-side view to see APA, MLA, and Chicago together and decide which your assignment needs.
  4. Read the formatted citation, press Copy, and paste it into your document. Then close the tab and move on.

The rules behind each format

Each style is built from the official manual, not guessed at:

For three or more authors, APA lists every author up to twenty, MLA shortens to the first author plus "et al.", and Chicago lists up to three then switches to "et al." for four or more.

Examples

Here is the same book — George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four (Secker & Warburg, 1949) — in all three styles:

And a journal article by two authors:

Common use cases

Why use this citation generator

Most citation makers hide the full feature set behind a sign-up wall, limit you to one format, or bury the tool under banners and pop-ups. This generator does the opposite: three major styles, four source types, instant results, a one-click copy, and no account required. Because the formatting runs entirely in your browser, the bibliographic details you enter never leave your device — handy when you are citing unpublished or sensitive work.

It also sits alongside a small writing toolkit. Once your draft is cited you can check its length with the Word Counter, estimate how long it runs with Words to Pages, or confirm a strict character limit with the Character Counter.

Frequently asked questions

Which citation style should I use?

Use the one your instructor, journal, or style guide requires. As a rough guide, APA is common in psychology, education, and the sciences; MLA is used in literature, languages, and the humanities; and Chicago appears in history and some social sciences.

What is the difference between an in-text citation and a reference-list entry?

An in-text citation is the short pointer inside your sentences, such as (Smith, 2020). The reference-list, works-cited, or bibliography entry is the full citation this tool builds. You normally need both.

What if I am missing some information, like the author or date?

Fill in whatever you have and leave the rest blank; the tool builds the citation from the fields you provide. When there is no author, APA and MLA move the title to the front. When there is no date, APA uses n.d.

Are my citations saved or shared anywhere?

No. The tool runs in your browser and does not send the details you type to any server, log them, or store them. Refresh or close the tab and the data is gone.