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    Categories: Normas APA

Chicago Citation Style vs APA: Key Differences Explained

Chicago and APA are two of the most widely used academic citation systems, but they serve different disciplines and operate on fundamentally different logic. Choosing the wrong one — or mixing rules from both — is a common error that affects the credibility of academic work. This guide breaks down the key differences across every major dimension.


Who Uses Each Style

StylePrimary fieldsGoverning body
APA (7th ed.)Psychology, social sciences, education, nursing, businessAmerican Psychological Association
Chicago (17th ed.)History, humanities, arts, literature, some social sciencesUniversity of Chicago Press

Two Systems Within Chicago

Chicago has two distinct citation systems — a detail many students miss:

Chicago systemIn-text formatEnd-of-text formatCommon in
Notes-Bibliography (NB)Footnotes or endnotes with full citation detailsBibliographyHumanities: history, literature, arts
Author-Date (AD)(Author year, page)Reference listSciences and social sciences

The Author-Date system is structurally similar to APA. The Notes-Bibliography system is not — it uses numbered footnotes instead of parenthetical citations.

In-Text Citation Comparison

SituationAPAChicago Author-DateChicago Notes-Bibliography
Single author(Smith, 2022)(Smith 2022)¹ John Smith, Title (Publisher, 2022), 45.
Two authors(Smith & Jones, 2022)(Smith and Jones 2022)¹ Smith and Jones, 2022, 45.
Three or more(Smith et al., 2022)(Smith et al. 2022)¹ Smith et al., 2022, 45.
With page number(Smith, 2022, p. 45)(Smith 2022, 45)Included in footnote

Key difference: APA uses a comma between author and year; Chicago Author-Date does not. APA uses «&» between two authors; Chicago uses «and.»

Reference List vs. Bibliography

FeatureAPA Reference ListChicago Bibliography
Title«References»«Bibliography» or «Works Cited»
What’s includedOnly sources cited in the textMay include sources consulted but not cited
Author formatLast, F. M. (inverted for all)Last, First (inverted for first author only in NB)
Date positionAfter author, in parenthesesAt the end of the entry (NB) or after author (AD)
IndentationHanging indentHanging indent

Journal Article: Format Comparison

APA 7th edition

Smith, J. A. (2022). Memory consolidation during sleep in young adults. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 34(5), 912–928. https://doi.org/10.1162/jocn_a_01830

Chicago Notes-Bibliography

Smith, John A. "Memory Consolidation During Sleep in Young Adults." Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 34, no. 5 (2022): 912–928. https://doi.org/10.1162/jocn_a_01830

Chicago Author-Date

Smith, John A. 2022. "Memory consolidation during sleep in young adults." Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 34 (5): 912–928. https://doi.org/10.1162/jocn_a_01830

Book: Format Comparison

FeatureAPAChicago NB
Title formatSentence case, italicizedTitle case, italicized
Publisher locationNot required (removed in 7th ed.)Required: City: Publisher
Edition(3rd ed.)3rd ed.

Other Key Differences

FeatureAPAChicago
Running headRequired for manuscripts; optional for student papersNot used
AbstractRequired for most papersNot standard
FootnotesContent notes only (not citations)Primary citation method in NB system
Ibid.Not usedUsed in NB to refer to the immediately preceding source
DOI formathttps://doi.org/…https://doi.org/…

Which One Should You Use?

The choice is almost always made for you by your discipline, institution, or target journal. If your department or professor has not specified a style, check what the leading journals in your field use. History and humanities departments typically require Chicago NB. Psychology and social science programs almost always require APA. When in doubt, ask before you write — changing citation styles mid-document is time-consuming.

For full APA formatting guidance, see the APA format center.

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