ChatGPT Citations | Formats & Examples
ChatGPT, the popular AI language model, is quite new. Educational institutions and style guides are still working out their policies on when and how content from the tool can be used and cited in academic writing.
Guidelines are still evolving, so we provide formats based on what the different style guides have said about the issue so far. This article will be updated over time to reflect the latest guidelines as different authorities develop their recommendations.
We also discuss when you should cite ChatGPT and whether ChatGPT itself can cite sources.
How to cite ChatGPT in APA Style
Create an APA reference entry that lists OpenAI as the author and ChatGPT as the title, adding the date of the version used (shown at the bottom of the page on the ChatGPT site), the descriptive text “Large language model” in square brackets, and the URL.
The in-text citation consists of “OpenAI” plus the year of the version you used. Add an in-text citation each time you quote or paraphrase text from the tool.
APA advises describing how you used the tool in your methodology section or introduction and including the prompt you used whenever you quote a ChatGPT response. You may also add an APA appendix that includes the full text of any longer ChatGPT responses you quote from.
APA format | OpenAI. (Year). ChatGPT (Month Day version) [Large language model]. https://chat.openai.com |
APA reference entry | OpenAI. (2023). ChatGPT (Feb 13 version) [Large language model]. https://chat.openai.com |
APA in-text citation | (OpenAI, 2023) |
How to cite ChatGPT in MLA style
MLA suggests creating a Works Cited entry for any responses you quote or paraphrase from ChatGPT, as well as an in-text citation at the point where you include it in your text.
The Works Cited entry starts with the title (the specific prompt you used, in quotation marks). Then write “ChatGPT” and the date of the version you used, “OpenAI”, the date when you received the response, and the general URL of the tool.
The in-text citation consists of a shortened version of the title (shortened to three words) in quotation marks.
MLA format | “Text of prompt” prompt. ChatGPT, Day Month version, OpenAI, Day Month Year, chat.openai.com. |
MLA Works Cited entry | “Tell me about confirmation bias” prompt. ChatGPT, 13 Feb. version, OpenAI, 16 Feb. 2023, chat.openai.com. |
MLA in-text citation | (“Tell me about”) |
MLA advises that if you use an AI tool like ChatGPT or Bing AI to locate sources and then use those sources in your work (rather than using the AI-generated text itself), you only need to cite the sources you actually used, not the AI tool used to find them.
MLA also states that if you used an AI tool to edit your writing or translate words, you should acknowledge this at an appropriate point in your text or in a note.
How to cite ChatGPT in Chicago style
Chicago style recommends citing ChatGPT in a Chicago footnote, treating it as a personal communication similar to an unpublished interview. Personal communications are non-retrievable sources and therefore shouldn’t be included in your Chicago bibliography.
If the prompt you used on ChatGPT is already mentioned in your text, the footnote consists of the phrase “Text generated by ChatGPT”, the date you prompted it, “OpenAI”, and the URL. Use the general URL of the tool, not one that links you to the specific response – this won’t work for other users.
If you cite the same ChatGPT text again, you can shorten the note to just “ChatGPT”.
2 ChatGPT.
If the prompt you used doesn’t already appear in your text, add it to the footnote.
If you’ve edited the text generated by ChatGPT, mention this in your note.
Do I need to cite ChatGPT?
Universities and citation authorities are still working out if and when it’s appropriate to cite ChatGPT in your work. There isn’t a clear consensus yet. Always check your institution’s guidelines or ask your instructor if you’re not sure.
If you’re using ChatGPT responses as a primary source (e.g., you’re studying the abilities of AI language models), you should definitely cite it for this purpose, just as you would any piece of evidence.
If you use ChatGPT to help you in the research or writing process (e.g., using it to develop research questions or create an outline), you may be required to cite or acknowledge it in some way. Check if your institution has guidelines about this.
Don’t cite ChatGPT as a source of factual information (e.g., asking it to define a term and then quoting its definition in your paper). ChatGPT isn’t always trustworthy and is not considered a credible source for use in academic writing.
Can ChatGPT cite sources?
Some people are curious about where ChatGPT gets the information it uses in its responses and have asked it to cite its sources. When asked, it attempts to do so and sometimes provides real sources, but it also provides sources that don’t seem to exist.
This is probably because of how ChatGPT works: it reproduces patterns in the texts it was trained on, but it doesn’t actively consult sources to find information. It’s only able to use sources from its training data (which went up to 2021), it can’t search the internet, and it isn’t really conscious of what sources it’s using for each response.
People have also tried to use ChatGPT as a citation generator by asking it to cite specific sources or to insert citations into their work, but it tends not to work particularly well:
- When given specific sources, ChatGPT can provide citations, but they often contain wrong information or are formatted incorrectly for the requested style.
- When asked to add sources without being told which ones, it tends to create plausible-looking citations for sources that don’t actually exist.
Because of this, it’s not a good idea to use ChatGPT for citing sources. Instead, you can try a tool designed specifically for this purpose, like the Scribbr Citation Generator.
Other interesting articles
If you want more tips on using AI tools, understanding plagiarism, and citing sources, make sure to check out some of our other articles with explanations, examples, and formats.
Using AI tools
Plagiarism
Frequently asked questions
Sources for this article
We strongly encourage students to use sources in their work. You can cite our article (APA Style) or take a deep dive into the articles below.
This Scribbr articleCaulfield, J. (2023, May 15). ChatGPT Citations | Formats & Examples. Scribbr. Retrieved 17 March 2025, from https://www.scribbr.co.uk/using-ai-tools/chatgpt-references/
Chicago Manual of Style. (n.d.). Citation, documentation of sources. The Chicago Manual of Style Online. Retrieved March 31, 2023, from https://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/qanda/data/faq/topics/Documentation.html
McAdoo, T. (2023, April 7). How to cite ChatGPT. APA Style Blog. https://apastyle.apa.org/blog/how-to-cite-chatgpt