“It’s right there on Wikipedia.” By the time you’re writing a thesis, that line stops being an argument. Wikipedia is the most-read encyclopaedia in the world, it’s free, and most of the time it’s surprisingly good — and yet in 90% of theses it has no business being in the bibliography. This post explains why, lists the rare cases where Wikipedia is legitimate, and shows how to use Wikipedia productively without anyone noticing — and without a sloppy citation blowing up in your face later.
Why Wikipedia is usually not a permissible citation
Academic citation rests on three principles: traceability, authority, and stability. Wikipedia struggles on all three.
- Traceability: Wikipedia articles are collective texts. You can trace which user wrote which sentence through the history tab, but no single author stands behind the article as a whole. In academia you cite someone who vouches for the claim.
- Authority: A peer-reviewed paper has been checked by at least two experts. A Wikipedia article has been written by hundreds of anonymous editors — well moderated, but with no formal review process. For an academic claim that is too thin.
- Stability: The Wikipedia article you cite today can look different tomorrow. APA 7 therefore requires a specific version (a permalink) — and even then the work itself keeps moving.
Most exam regulations don’t spell it out, but they require “academic literature” as the source. Wikipedia is — like textbooks, dictionaries, and government yearbooks — tertiary literature: a work that summarises academic findings. In research you don’t cite the summary, you cite the research.
When Wikipedia is legitimate after all
There are clear exceptions where Wikipedia is a perfectly valid source — sometimes the only one:
1. Wikipedia is your research object
If you’re writing about Wikipedia — about collective knowledge production, the language of online encyclopaedias, the version history of a politically contested article — then Wikipedia is a primary source. A linguist studying gender forms in German Wikipedia articles cites Wikipedia. A computer scientist analysing bot edits cites Wikipedia. That isn’t tertiary content, that’s data.
2. You’re documenting public perception or common knowledge
Sometimes the claim itself is: “Wikipedia presents this topic in such-and-such a way.” In discourse analysis, media studies, or science communication that’s a legitimate anchor. Even then you cite the specific version, not “Wikipedia” generically.
3. The term or definition simply can’t be sourced elsewhere
Very rare. For brand-new technical terms, memes, or online phenomena Wikipedia can genuinely be the first systematic account. Even there: hunt for the original paper, the blog post, the white paper first.
In every other case — and that’s the vast majority — Wikipedia is a tool, not a citation.
Wikipedia as a stepping stone: how to use it productively
This is where the real value sits. Wikipedia saves you hours when you treat it as what it is: a dense, high-quality overview text with pointers to the actual literature.
Step 1 — Orient yourself
Read the Wikipedia article on your topic from start to finish. Write down the central concepts, people, schools of thought, dates. It’s the fastest map you can get. You don’t have to mention it anywhere.
Step 2 — Mine the footnotes
Scroll to the bottom of the article. The “References” section nearly always contains the standard literature of your field — monographs, key articles, classic papers. That’s gold. You read those sources yourself, vet them, and then cite the originals.
Step 3 — Use the page history as a dating tool
When you wonder when a particular term entered a discourse, the “View history” tab can be a surprisingly good orientation aid. Not for citing — for orienting.
Used this way, Wikipedia gives you the overview in 30 minutes that would otherwise take half a day. Nobody expects you to disclose this in the methods chapter. You also wouldn’t mention having done a Google search.
When you do have to cite Wikipedia — how to do it right
Suppose you’re in a programme where Wikipedia is permissible, or your supervisor has explicitly allowed it. Then the rule is: permalink, version date, access date.
How to find the permalink
- Open the article.
- Click “View history” (top right).
- Pick the version you’re citing (usually the current one).
- Click the date of that version — you’ll land on a URL with
?oldid=…. - That URL is your stable permalink.
APA 7
Federal Statistical Office. (n.d.). Switzerland. In Wikipedia. Retrieved June 15, 2026, from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Switzerland&oldid=247891234
APA 7 wants the article title (italic), the phrase In Wikipedia, the retrieval date (because content can change), and the version-specific link. If you use the oldid permalink you can technically drop the retrieval date — APA still recommends including it.
Harvard
Wikipedia (2026): Switzerland. URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Switzerland&oldid=247891234 (permalink, accessed 15 June 2026).
Chicago Notes
Switzerland, Wikipedia, last modified June 14, 2026, accessed June 15, 2026, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Switzerland&oldid=247891234.
Important in every style: no anonymous author. Don’t write “Anon.” or “Various authors.” The article title takes the place of the author, and “Wikipedia” is the source.
The stability question: why the permalink is non-negotiable
Without a permalink you’re citing a text that a future reader might not even be able to find. Imagine sourcing a statistic from Wikipedia, someone checks your bibliography six months later, clicks the link — and reads something completely different. At best embarrassing, at worst an accusation of misquotation.
The oldid permalink points to a frozen snapshot. Anyone can verify what was there at the moment you cited it — even if the article has since been rewritten.
Common mistakes — and how to avoid them
Mistake 1: Wikipedia appears in the bibliography but the in-text reference is just “cf. internet” or “cf. online.” That’s not a citation. Wikipedia also needs a specific claim tied to a specific source.
Mistake 2: You cite Wikipedia even though Wikipedia’s own footnote points elsewhere. If the end of the sentence on Wikipedia points to a paper by Mueller (2018), then Mueller (2018) is your source — not Wikipedia.
Mistake 3: You translate from English Wikipedia and cite the German version. Sounds absurd, happens all the time. English and German Wikipedia are different works. If you’re citing the English one, the link goes to en.wikipedia.org.
Mistake 4: You cite Wikipedia for a quantitative claim that lives in the original source (UN, OECD, national statistics office, etc.) directly. Fetch the number from the primary source. Wikipedia is just the courier here.
Mistake 5: You drag Wikipedia footnotes straight into your bibliography. That’s an especially elegant form of secondary citation. Read the original. If you can’t access the original, drop the claim.
How to check Wikipedia against the original source
A concrete workflow when you want to use a Wikipedia claim:
- Mark the passage that interests you.
- Follow the footnote to the original source.
- Get the original (library, Google Scholar, ResearchGate, direct contact with the author).
- Open it to the page cited.
- Compare whether the claim genuinely appears there.
- Cite the original, not Wikipedia.
Step 5 is where things routinely go wrong. Wikipedia editors are, in the majority, conscientious — but they’re human. Claims shift in paraphrase, page numbers slip, numbers go out of date. If you copy blindly without comparing against the original source, you bake misquotations into your thesis.
Wikipedia plus AI generation — the new edge case
Since ChatGPT, Claude, and similar models have Wikipedia in their training data, a new pattern is showing up: you ask a language model, get an answer that is essentially a paraphrased Wikipedia article — and the model invents an “original source” alongside it. If you take that source into your thesis without checking, you’ve got a double problem: you’re citing a hallucination that ultimately traces back to a Wikipedia text you could have used directly.
Concrete rule: every source an AI tool proposes gets checked before it enters your thesis. Does the work exist? Does the claim appear there? Is the page number right?
The short answer to the opening question
Can you cite Wikipedia? In most cases, no. Use Wikipedia as a stepping stone, read the footnotes, cite the originals. If your topic is Wikipedia itself or your supervisor explicitly allows it, use permalink, article title, and access date. Don’t mix the two paths.
The real argument isn’t “Wikipedia yes or no,” it’s: does the citation actually hold up? That’s exactly what Acurio is built for. You upload your finished thesis along with your cited source PDFs, and Acurio checks, citation by citation, whether the source genuinely says what you claim. Whether that source is a Wikipedia article, a peer-reviewed paper, or a book, the question is always the same: is it true?