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Chicago Citation Generator

Build Chicago-style references in either Notes-Bibliography or Author-Date system — CMOS 17th ed.

Chicago subsystem

Footnotes/endnotes + bibliography. Used in history, literature, the arts.

Authors

Chicago bibliography entry

Foner, Eric. The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery. New York: W. W. Norton, 2010.

In-text footnote

First footnote uses full form; later notes shorten to "Family, Short Title, page". Example: Eric Foner, The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery, 12.

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How to use Chicago Citation Generator

What this tool does

This generator builds Chicago-style references following The Chicago Manual of Style, 17th edition (2017) — the citation format expected by most humanities and many social-science journals, plus US academic book publishers. Pick the subsystem (Notes-Bibliography or Author-Date), choose a source type, fill in the bibliographic fields, and the tool emits a copy-ready entry plus a sample in-text citation matched to the subsystem you picked.

Everything runs on your device. Nothing you type is uploaded.

Notes-Bibliography vs Author-Date — pick by discipline

Chicago is unusual among style guides because it ships two complete, incompatible citation systems under one cover. You choose one for the whole document.

Notes-Bibliography (NB) is the humanities subsystem. History, literature, art history, philosophy, religious studies, classics, and musicology overwhelmingly use NB. Inline citations are footnotes or endnotes — a superscript number in the body text, then a numbered note at the foot of the page or the end of the chapter. The first note for each source carries the full citation; subsequent notes shorten to “Family, Short Title, page”. A separate alphabetical bibliography at the back of the document lists every source cited.

Author-Date is the sciences subsystem. Sociology, anthropology, economics, business, psychology, and the physical sciences use Author-Date when they use Chicago at all. Inline citations are parenthetical: (Smith 2020, 47). A reference list — alphabetical by author surname — sits at the back. There are no footnotes for sources; footnotes (if any) are reserved for substantive commentary that does not fit in the main text.

The two subsystems share most fields but differ in author formatting at the start of the entry, year placement, and a few punctuation details. Switching the segmented control above shows the difference live.

Worked examples

Notes-Bibliography — a book:

Foner, Eric. The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery. New York: W. W. Norton, 2010.

Author-Date — the same book:

Foner, Eric. 2010. The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery. New York: W. W. Norton.

Notes-Bibliography — a journal article:

Chen, Robert. “Reconstruction Memory in the Reconstruction Era.” American Historical Review 128, no. 3 (2023): 412-438.

Author-Date — a website:

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2024. “Influenza Surveillance.” CDC.gov. Accessed May 21, 2026. https://www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly/.

Common Chicago mistakes

Using NB in a sociology paper (or Author-Date in a history paper). The subsystem is dictated by discipline. A sociology journal will reject NB on sight; a history journal expects NB and gets confused by parenthetical citations. Read the submission guide before you start formatting.

Mixing footnotes and parentheticals. Chicago does not allow this. Within one document, every source citation goes in the same place — the note or the parenthesis — never both. Substantive footnotes (commentary on the text) are still allowed in Author-Date papers; just do not use them for citing sources.

Forgetting “and” before the last author in NB. Notes-Bibliography uses “Author1, Author2, and Author3” with the Oxford comma. Author-Date in this generator follows the same form. For 10+ authors, list the first seven then “et al.” (with the period).

Inconsistent shortened-title form. In NB, the first footnote gives the full citation; subsequent notes use a shortened form: “Family, Short Title, page.” Pick a short title and use it consistently — do not use different abbreviations on different pages.

Headline-style title capitalisation for headings, sentence-style for titles you’re quoting. Chicago capitalises book and article titles headline-style (major words capitalised). Some social-science journals override this with sentence-style for article titles; if your target journal does, override the output before submitting.

Chicago vs Turabian

Turabian is Chicago for students. The citation forms are identical — this generator works for both. Turabian additionally specifies thesis formatting conventions (margins, heading hierarchy, table layout) that sit outside any citation tool. If your style sheet says “Turabian Notes-Bibliography”, use NB here and you are correct on the citation side; check the Turabian manual for the layout details.

Privacy

Reference text is built by JavaScript string formatting running locally on your device. No fetch calls, no analytics on the values you enter, no server-side logging.

Frequently asked questions

When do I use Notes-Bibliography vs Author-Date?
Pick by discipline, not preference. Notes-Bibliography (NB) is the humanities subsystem — history, art history, literature, philosophy, religion, classics. Citations live in footnotes (or endnotes) and a single alphabetical bibliography sits at the back. Author-Date is the sciences subsystem — sociology, anthropology, economics, business, psychology, the physical sciences. Citations are parenthetical (Smith 2020, 47) inline and a reference list at the back is also alphabetical. Most journals tell you which one they want in their submission guide; if you can choose, history papers use NB and almost everything quantitative uses Author-Date. The two are not mix-and-match — pick one for the entire document.
What is the difference between Chicago and Turabian?
Turabian is a student-focused subset of Chicago. Kate Turabian's A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations (9th ed., 2018) is built on Chicago but tuned for dissertations and term papers — same citation forms, slightly different layout conventions for tables, block quotes, and front-matter. If your style sheet says 'Turabian', use this generator with Notes-Bibliography selected and you will be 100% correct on the citation side. The only place Turabian diverges from Chicago is at the manuscript level (margins, heading hierarchy), which is outside the scope of a citation tool.
How do I cite an edited volume or a chapter in one?
Cite the chapter author as the author, the chapter title in quotes, then 'In Book Title, edited by [Editor Name], page range. Publisher, Year.' For example: Smith, Jane. "On Memory and History." In Essays on the Civil War, edited by Robert Chen, 23-47. Yale University Press, 2024. This generator's Book source type covers the standalone-monograph case; for chapters in edited volumes, paste the chapter title into Title, the editor and book details into Publisher, and adjust the output. A future update will add a dedicated chapter type.
Do I need page numbers in footnotes for Notes-Bibliography?
Yes when you are citing a specific passage, quotation, or figure — that is the entire reason NB exists. The footnote shows exactly where in the source the cited material lives. Bibliography entries (the back-of-book list) do not show specific page numbers for books; they show the publication metadata only. For journal articles the bibliography entry shows the article's full page range. In Author-Date the parenthetical (Smith 2020, 47) carries the page number; the reference list does not.
Is anything I type sent to a server?
No. The reference is built by JavaScript string formatting running locally on your device. Author names, titles, page numbers — every value you enter stays in the tab. No fetch calls, no analytics on input, no server-side logging. You can verify in the Network panel: once the page has loaded, going offline changes nothing about the generator.

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