Citation examplesblog post in Chicago (author-date)

How to cite a blog post in Chicago (author-date)

A post on a personal or corporate blog. Chicago's author-date system. Dominant in history, sociology, and the natural sciences.

Quick answer

To cite a blog post in Chicago (author-date), include the author(s), year, title, and container or publisher details. A concrete example is below.

Example

Roe, T.. 2026. "The state of citation management in 2026." Scholarly Kitchen. https://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2026/01/12/example

This example is rendered with the official CSL definition for Chicago (author-date). For the exact style required by your journal, paste your references into DEEPNOTIS and pick that style from the dropdown — the app covers 2,800+ variants.

What you need

For a blog post, Chicago (author-date) expects these fields at minimum:

  • Author(s)
  • Year
  • Title
  • Source/container
  • Identifier (DOI / URL)

Common mistakes

  • Mixing bibliography formatting with in-text citation rules. Reference-list entries and in-text cites follow different patterns — use the style's official guide for both.
  • Forgetting the DOI. When a DOI exists, most styles now require it (usually as a full https://doi.org/… URL).
  • Inconsistent capitalization. APA uses sentence case for titles; MLA and Chicago use title case. Mixing them is the single most common style error.

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Last updated: 5 May 2026