What Is an APA Title Page and Why Does It Matter?
You’ve just finished a grueling research paper. The data is analyzed, the arguments are sound, and the references are meticulously formatted. Now, you’re staring at a blank document, wondering how to present it all professionally. The first thing your professor, journal editor, or conference committee will see is not your brilliant thesis, but your title page.
In the world of academic writing, first impressions are everything. A properly formatted APA title page signals credibility, attention to detail, and respect for scholarly conventions. It tells your reader that you understand the rules of the game before they even read the first sentence of your abstract.
The American Psychological Association (APA) style is the standard for papers in the social sciences, including psychology, education, and business. Its title page requirements are specific, and getting them wrong can immediately mark your work as amateurish. This guide will walk you through every element, from font size to running head alignment, ensuring your paper makes the right impression from the very first page.
The Core Elements of an APA Title Page
An APA title page for a student paper contains three to four key elements, all centered horizontally and placed in the top half of the page. For professional papers submitted to a journal, a fifth element is added. Let’s break down each component you need to assemble.
The Running Head
The running head is a shortened version of your paper’s full title. It appears in the page header of every single page, including the title page. For student papers, the running head is now optional unless your instructor requires it. For professional papers, it is mandatory.
On the title page, the running head is preceded by the label “Running head:”. Here is the exact formatting:
– It is left-aligned in the page header.
– It is written in all capital letters.
– It must be 50 characters or fewer, including spaces and punctuation.
– The label “Running head:” appears only on the title page. On subsequent pages, only the shortened title in all caps appears.
The Paper Title
This is the most prominent element. Your title should be concise, clear, and descriptive. Aim for 10 to 12 words. Place it in the upper half of the page, centered.
– Use title case: Capitalize the first letter of major words (nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns) and any words of four letters or more. Do not capitalize articles (a, an, the), coordinating conjunctions (and, but, or), or prepositions (of, in, on), unless they are the first or last word.
– The title should be bolded.
– It can span one or two lines. If it takes two lines, double-space between them.
Your Name and Institutional Affiliation
Directly below the title, centered, you list the author or authors. For a single author, simply put your name. For multiple authors, list them all on the same line, separated by commas. Use your first name, middle initial(s), and last name.
Beneath the author name(s), on a new line, place your institutional affiliation. This is typically the university or college where you conducted the research. Do not include the department unless specifically required.
The Course Number, Instructor Name, and Due Date
This final block is for student papers. Place it on separate lines, centered, below the affiliation.
– Course number and name (e.g., PSYC 101: Introduction to Psychology)
– Instructor’s name (e.g., Dr. Jane Smith)
– Assignment due date (e.g., May 15, 2023)
Write the date in the full month, day, year format common in the United States.
A Step-by-Step Walkthrough in Your Word Processor
Knowing the rules is one thing; implementing them in Microsoft Word, Google Docs, or another editor is another. Let’s translate the requirements into actionable steps.
Setting Up the Page and Header
Start with a blank document. Set your page margins to 1 inch on all sides. Use a standard, readable font like 12-point Times New Roman, which is the APA default. Ensure double-spacing is enabled for the entire document.
Now, double-click the top of the page to open the header area. Check the box for “Different First Page” if your word processor has it. This allows you to have “Running head:” only on the title page.
Type “Running head:” followed by a space, then type your shortened title in all capital letters. Align this text to the left. Press the Tab key twice to move the cursor to the right-aligned position. Insert the page number “1”. Close the header.
Centering and Adding the Main Content
Click back into the main body of the document. Make sure your text alignment is set to “Center”.
Press Enter several times to move down to the upper third of the page. Type your full paper title, applying bold formatting. If your title is long, press Enter after a logical phrase to start a second line, and remember to double-space between the lines.
Press Enter twice (which, with double-spacing, creates the correct white space). Type your name. Press Enter twice. Type your institutional affiliation (e.g., University of California, Berkeley).
For a student paper, press Enter twice. Type the course number and name. Press Enter twice. Type the instructor’s name. Press Enter twice. Finally, type the due date.
Checking Your Work
Before you consider it finished, perform these critical checks:
– Is everything centered horizontally?
– Is the font 12-point Times New Roman (or another approved font like Calibri or Arial)?
– Is the entire document double-spaced, including the title page?
– Is the running head 50 characters or less and in all caps?
– Does the page number “1” appear in the top right corner?
– Is the title in bold and in title case?
– Is the date format correct?
APA Title Page Examples: Student vs. Professional
Seeing the format in action clarifies the rules. Here is a visual breakdown of the two main types.
Example of a Student Title Page
Imagine a student paper for a psychology class. The full title is “The Effects of Sleep Deprivation on Cognitive Performance in University Students”. The running head would be a shortened version like “SLEEP DEPRIVATION AND COGNITION”.
The centered section would look like this:
The Effects of Sleep Deprivation on Cognitive Performance in University Students
Alex J. Chen
Stanford University
PSYC 210: Cognitive Psychology
Professor Maria Rodriguez
October 26, 2023
In the header, you would see: “Running head: SLEEP DEPRIVATION AND COGNITION” left-aligned, and the page number “1” right-aligned.
Example of a Professional Title Page
A paper being submitted to the “Journal of Applied Psychology” has a different requirement. It omits the course information and includes an author note at the bottom of the page.
The centered section is simpler:
Remote Work and Employee Well-Being: A Two-Year Longitudinal Study
Jordan P. Lee and Taylor R. Kim
Harvard University
The header is the same, with the running head. The key addition is the Author Note, which is placed in the lower half of the page. This section is left-aligned and may include departmental affiliations, acknowledgments, funding sources, and contact information. It starts with the label “Author Note” on its own line, not bolded or italicized.
Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Even seasoned students can slip up. Here are the most frequent errors that can undermine your paper’s professionalism.
Incorrect Running Head Format
Mistake: Writing “Running Head:” with a capital H, or forgetting the colon. Placing it in the center of the page instead of left-aligned. Including it on every page instead of just the title page.
Solution: Remember the precise label is “Running head:” with a lowercase ‘h’. Use your word processor’s header function and the “Different First Page” setting to control its appearance.
Misformatting the Title
Mistake: Writing the entire title in all capital letters. Forgetting to bold it. Using sentence case (only the first word capitalized) instead of title case.
Solution: Use the title case rules diligently. The bold is a simple formatting click but is often overlooked. Your title should stand out, but not scream.
Wrong Spacing and Alignment
Mistake: Single-spacing the title page, or using multiple tabs and spaces to manually center text, which can become misaligned.
Solution: Apply double-spacing to your entire document from the start. Use the center alignment button for the main title page content, not the space bar or tab key.
Advanced Considerations and Troubleshooting
What if your situation isn’t covered by the basic template? APA style has guidelines for more complex scenarios.
Multiple Authors and Affiliations
If authors are from different institutions, use superscript numbers after each author’s name and before their corresponding affiliation. List the affiliations in the same order as the author numbers.
For example:
Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Leadership Styles
Anna Garcia¹ and David Park²
¹University of Madrid
²Seoul National University
No Designated Instructor or Course
For an independent study or a paper not for a specific class, you can omit the course and instructor lines. Simply end the centered block with the date. When in doubt, include as much clear identifying information as your context requires.
Your Software Is Fighting You
Sometimes, getting the header to behave is the biggest challenge. If you cannot get “Running head:” to appear only on the first page, a common workaround is to create the entire document without it. Then, for the title page only, you can insert a header with the running head and page number, and for the second page, insert a new header with just the shortened title and page number. It’s less elegant but gets the job done.
Your Action Plan for a Perfect Title Page
Creating an impeccable APA title page is a mechanical skill that becomes second nature with practice. Start by using the correct template—many universities and the APA website itself offer downloadable Word templates that are pre-formatted. These can save you from layout headaches.
Always, always cross-reference your work against the latest edition of the APA Publication Manual (the 7th Edition as of now). Style guides do get updated. When you think you’re finished, print the title page. A physical copy often reveals spacing and alignment issues that are easy to miss on a screen.
Finally, remember its purpose. This page is the gateway to your intellectual work. A flawless title page doesn’t make your research better, but it shows the care you’ve invested in presenting it. It prepares your reader to receive your ideas with seriousness and respect, setting the stage for everything that follows. Now that you know the rules, you can focus on what truly matters: the content of your paper.