Self-plagiarism sounds like a term examination offices invented to annoy students. You can’t really steal from yourself. And yet self-plagiarism causes a steady stream of failed bachelor’s theses every year — usually not because anyone meant to cheat, but because three pages from a third-semester seminar paper migrated quietly into the introduction of the final thesis. Here’s what self-plagiarism actually is, when it’s harmless, when it costs you points or your grade, and how to avoid it cleanly.
What self-plagiarism is, exactly
Self-plagiarism (also: text recycling, double submission, duplicate publication) means the unmarked reuse of your own text passages, arguments, or results from an earlier piece of your own work in a new assessed submission. The term covers three situations:
- Double submission: the same paper is submitted in two different courses, or at two different institutions, for credit.
- Text reuse: longer passages from an earlier seminar or term paper migrate verbatim — or lightly reworded — into a new paper without citation.
- Argument and structure recycling: the outline, the line of argument, or the central thesis of an earlier paper is re-dressed without disclosing the previous work.
The common denominator is not “stealing” — it’s deception about the origin of an assessed text. A thesis is supposed to be a new, independent piece of work. Reusing parts of older submissions without permission presents something as new that isn’t.
Why universities take it seriously
Three reasons examination regulations sanction self-plagiarism:
- The same work counted twice. If the same three pages contribute to two grades, you effectively get two marks for one piece of work. That distorts the grading system.
- A false declaration of authorship. When you sign the affidavit on the title page, you certify that the work is new and independent. A verbatim reuse from your earlier seminar paper is new from the student’s point of view, but not independent in the sense of the declaration — not without disclosure.
- Scientific integrity. In published research, double-publishing the same study in two journals is a clear violation of standards under bodies like the DFG (German Research Foundation) or COPE (Committee on Publication Ethics). Students get socialized into those standards early.
In practice, severity varies. Some departments treat self-plagiarism as harshly as plagiarism — fail, banned year, file note. Others treat it as a formal error with point deductions. You only find out the difference when it’s too late. So: treat it like plagiarism.
Four typical student scenarios
Case 1: The seminar paper as quarry
In your third semester you wrote a 15-page seminar paper on “Market power abuse by platforms” — solid, B+. Two years later your bachelor’s thesis is “Regulating online platforms under the DMA” — the theory section overlaps almost perfectly. The temptation: copy-paste three pages of introduction.
Why it’s self-plagiarism: the passages were already submitted as assessed work. They are not “common knowledge”, even if they’re yours. The thesis presents them as new contribution.
Clean route: rewrite the theory section. Where definitions or arguments really must remain identical, cite your seminar paper as unpublished prior work (“Smith 2024, unpublished seminar paper, pp. 4–6”) — and get the supervisor’s written permission first.
Case 2: The same paper for two courses
Two courses both require a term paper. The topics are close. You write one paper and submit it twice — maybe with minor tweaks.
Why it’s self-plagiarism: classic double submission. Even with minor adjustments, the same assessed work is being graded twice. Most regulations name this explicitly as a violation.
Clean route: even on the same topic — pick a different focus, a different research question, different sources for each course. If you really want to build on the earlier paper, ask both lecturers in writing and document the permission.
Case 3: Extending the bachelor’s into the master’s thesis
Your master’s thesis builds on your bachelor’s thesis. Three pages from the BA methods section would still work perfectly in the MA — you copy them.
Why it can be self-plagiarism: even if the bachelor’s thesis was published or archived in the university repository, anything you reuse must be cited like any other source. If the BA is not publicly available, your institution’s rules for unpublished own work apply on top.
Clean route: cite your bachelor’s thesis like any other source — institution, year, title — and disclose in the master’s introduction that you build on it. Most supervisors expect exactly that.
Case 4: Your own publication or internship report
During an internship you wrote an internal report for the company, or you co-authored a paper. Parts of it fit your thesis.
Why it can be self-plagiarism: with co-authored work, the situation is even more delicate — you’re not just reusing your own words, but those of others. Internal reports add a copyright layer depending on your contract.
Clean route: cite published prior work like any other source, and address co-authorship openly. For company reports: get permission, clarify NDA status, and disclose the reuse in the thesis.
When reuse is allowed
Not every reuse is self-plagiarism. In these cases recycling is fine:
- Methodological boilerplate. If your research design uses the same procedure across multiple papers (a specific questionnaire method, a particular statistical analysis), you can adapt the methods section — provided you cite the prior work.
- Your own data and code. Research data, code repositories, experimental setups belong to you and can be reanalyzed in any new piece, as long as you cite them cleanly (even unpublished own data needs a reference).
- Standard phrasing. Sentences like “This study follows Mayring’s (2015) qualitative content analysis” are not protectable original text. Standard phrases are fine.
- Explicitly permitted reuse. If the regulations or the department permit reuse — as in cumulative dissertations, where published papers are incorporated into the thesis — the permission covers it.
Rule of thumb: reuse is okay when it’s disclosed and/or permitted. Hide it, and you’re plagiarizing yourself.
How to avoid self-plagiarism in practice
Four habits that prevent the problem upfront:
1. Add your own previous work to your reference manager
Create a folder “Own prior work” in Zotero or Citavi. Every term, seminar, and bachelor’s paper goes in as an entry — with proper metadata and the PDF attached. When you start a new paper, you search that folder with the same tools you use for external sources.
2. Settle plan and permission before writing
If you plan to build on an earlier paper, ask in writing — by email to your supervisor. Describe which passages or which idea you want to reuse. Keep the answer. In a dispute, that email is your most important evidence.
3. Tag reused text as you write
While writing, mark any reuse immediately — easiest with Word comments or coloured highlights. Before submission, walk through the comments and decide per passage: cite, rewrite, or cut. Pushing this to the end means forgetting half of it reliably.
4. Spot-check before submission
Plagiarism software often misses self-plagiarism — your seminar paper is usually not indexed anywhere. So do three manual spot-checks: open your old papers as PDFs in a text reader and search (Ctrl+F) for distinctive phrases from your new text. If “platform economy” and “market power abuse” appear in both the old and new paper, you know where to look.
Self-plagiarism vs. misquotation vs. external plagiarism
To keep the terms straight:
- External plagiarism: taking from someone else’s source without citing. Most severe violation.
- Self-plagiarism: taking from your own earlier work without citation or permission. Violates examination regulations; severity varies by department.
- Misquotation: the citation is in place, but the source does not say what you claim. Can be as serious as plagiarism, but is often treated as a separate offense.
Before submission, check all three. Looking only for external plagiarism leaves the other risks in the text.
If you’re already under suspicion — what to do
If you realize after submission that an older passage went in unmarked:
- Go to your supervisor before someone else notices. Self-reported self-plagiarism is treated more leniently than detected self-plagiarism in many codes.
- Bring documentation. Old paper as PDF, new thesis, affected passages marked. Explain whether you thought it fell under “own data” or “standard methodology” — misunderstandings count too.
- Offer a correction. Often a retroactive citation in the bibliography is acceptable if the substance of the work stays intact.
- No silent fixes. Submitting a quietly revised version without discussion is usually worse than an open conversation.
Clean academic work means: disclose everything
Self-plagiarism is at its core a transparency problem, not a theft problem. Naming your prior work, citing it, and embedding it openly is not self-plagiarism — even when entire passages come from earlier papers. Hiding it gets you a point deduction at best, a failed thesis at worst.
Acurio checks at the end of your thesis whether your citations actually match the sources — whether the claims in your text are really supported by what you cite. Self-plagiarism you have to catch upstream of that, by knowing your prior work, importing it into your reference manager, and disclosing reuse. The two together — clean self-disclosure plus verified external citations — give you the safest final week any thesis can offer.