IEEE vs APA: Which Citation Style Should You Use?

IEEE and APA are both rigorous citation systems, but they are built for entirely different disciplines and operate on different principles. Choosing between them is almost never a stylistic preference — it is determined by your field, your institution, or the journal you are targeting. This guide explains how they differ and when each applies.


The Core Difference

FeatureIEEEAPA
In-text citationNumbered brackets [1]Author-date (Smith, 2022)
Reference orderOrder of first citation in the textAlphabetical by author surname
Primary disciplinesElectrical engineering, computer science, telecommunications, applied sciencesPsychology, social sciences, education, nursing, business
Governing bodyInstitute of Electrical and Electronics EngineersAmerican Psychological Association
Author emphasisLow — author names are minimized in-textHigh — author names appear in every citation

In-Text Citation Comparison

SituationIEEEAPA
Basic citation…as shown in [1].…as shown (Smith, 2022).
Citing author by nameSmith et al. [1] demonstrated…Smith et al. (2022) demonstrated…
Multiple sources…previous studies [1]–[4].…previous studies (Chen, 2020; Park, 2021; Smith, 2022).
Direct quote with page[1, p. 45](Smith, 2022, p. 45)

Reference List Format Comparison

Journal article — IEEE

[1] J. A. Smith, M. Chen, and L. Park, "Deep learning for fault detection in power systems," IEEE Trans. Power Syst., vol. 38, no. 4, pp. 3210–3221, Aug. 2024, doi: 10.1109/TPWRS.2024.3400001.

Journal article — APA

Smith, J. A., Chen, M., & Park, L. (2024). Deep learning for fault detection in power systems. IEEE Transactions on Power Systems, 38(4), 3210–3221. https://doi.org/10.1109/TPWRS.2024.3400001

Key Formatting Differences

FeatureIEEEAPA
Author formatInitials before last name: J. A. SmithLast name, then initials: Smith, J. A.
Article titleIn quotation marks, sentence caseNo quotes, sentence case
Journal nameAbbreviated, italicizedFull name, italicized
Date positionNear end: month yearAfter author: (2024)
DOI formatdoi: 10.XXXX/…https://doi.org/…
Paper layoutTwo-column, 10 pt fontSingle-column, 12 pt font, double-spaced
Abstract label«Abstract» — keywords become «Index Terms»«Abstract» — keywords listed separately

When to Use IEEE

Use IEEE when your work is in electrical engineering, electronics, computer science, telecommunications, signal processing, robotics, or any applied engineering discipline. IEEE is also expected when submitting to IEEE journals (IEEE Transactions series, IEEE Access, IEEE Letters) or presenting at IEEE conferences (ICASSP, ICRA, GLOBECOM, CVPR co-sponsored events).

When to Use APA

Use APA when your work is in psychology, sociology, education, public health, nursing, communication, or business. APA is also required by most Latin American university programs that do not specify ICONTEC, and by many interdisciplinary journals in the social and behavioral sciences.

Can You Mix IEEE and APA?

No. Each paper follows one citation system throughout. Mixing systems — for example, using APA author-date citations in the body of an IEEE paper — is an error that journal reviewers and professors will flag immediately. If you are unsure which system a particular journal or course requires, check the author guidelines or ask before you write.

IEEE vs APA vs Other Styles: Quick Field Guide

FieldStandard style
Electrical engineering, CS, roboticsIEEE
Psychology, social sciencesAPA
Medicine, nursing, biomedicalVancouver
Humanities, history, literatureChicago/MLA
Colombian university papersAPA or ICONTEC NTC 1486
General sciences (biology, chemistry)APA or journal-specific

For full IEEE format guidance and templates, see the IEEE Format Center. For APA, see the APA format guide.

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