Free Citation Generators



  • BibMe
    http://www.bibme.org
    BibMe is a free citation generator developed at Carnegie Mellon University that produces citations and bibliographies in APA, MLA, Chicago and Turabian styles. It has some features not found in other free citation generators, such as autofill and the ability to switch between citation styles.
  • Citation Machine
    http://citationmachine.net/
    Citation Machine is a free site that automatically produces MLA, APA, Turabian or Chicago style citations for a variety of sources (but not bibliographies). Users can copy and paste citations into Word. It was developed by David Warlick, an educator.
  • Citavi Free
    http://www.citavi.com/en/index.html
    Free full-featured version of Citavi for up to 100 references. Search for, manage, organize and cite sources.
  • DocsCite
    http://www.asu.edu/lib/hayden/govdocs/docscite/docscite.htm
    Docscite is a free site that automatically produces MLA or APA style citations for government documents. DocsCite was developed at, and is provided by, Arizona State University Libraries.
  • KnightCite
    http://www.calvin.edu/library/knightcite/
    KnightCite is a free site that automatically produce MLA, APA, or Chicago style citations for 25 types of sources.
    From the Hekman Library at Calvin College.
  • Mendeley
    http://www.mendeley.com/
    A free reference manager and academic social network. Users can automatically generate bliographies, collaborate with other researchers online, import papers from other research software, find relevant papers, access papers from anywhere online, and read papers on the go with iPhone app.
  • NoodleTools Express
    http://www.noodletools.com/login.php
    Free tool that allows users to create citations in MLA, APA, and Chicago/Turabian styles that can be copied and pasted into a document. Citations are not compiled into a source list and cannot be saved.
  • StyleWizard
    http://www.stylewizard.com/
    This free site automatically produces MLA or APA style citations for 6 basic types of sources. There is excellent help on each screen to walk users through the processing of citing a source.
  • Zotero
    http://www.zotero.org
    Zotero is a free, open source utility that works in the Firefox browser to help users collect, manage and cite sources. It was developed at George Mason University. Highly recommended. See the University Libraries' Zotero guide

For further and best support, kindly visit:
http://www.apastyle.org/

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