← All posts

Self-plagiarism — when recycling your own work becomes a problem

Self-plagiarism sounds absurd — how can you steal from yourself? When reusing your own seminar papers in a bachelor's or master's thesis triggers proceedings, and how to handle it cleanly.

8 min read Self-plagiarismPlagiarismThesisBachelorMaster

Frequently asked questions

Can I reuse parts of my seminar paper in my bachelor's thesis?
Only with explicit permission from your examination office or supervisor. Most regulations require every thesis to be an independent piece of assessed work — no reuse of texts already submitted for credit. Ask in writing, document the answer, and cite the reuse in the thesis.
Does reusing my own research data count as self-plagiarism?
Recycling data and methods is common and usually unproblematic, as long as you cite the source (your own earlier work, dataset, publication). The problem starts when you reuse the same analysis or interpretation text verbatim without disclosure.
Can plagiarism software detect self-plagiarism at all?
Only if your earlier work is in the database — because it was published, sits in a repository, or has been submitted through the same tool before. Turnitin, for example, stores submissions across institutions. Supervisors who check manually on suspicion will find unindexed self-plagiarism too.

Continue reading

The 12 most common citation mistakes

Get the free PDF guide: examples from real bachelor's and master's theses.