AGLC 4th edition Citation Generator
Generate accurate AGLC 4th edition citations in seconds. Search by title, DOI, ISBN, or URL — or add references manually. Free, instant, and works for books, journal articles, websites, and more.
Cite webpages, books, articles, and more
What is AGLC 4th edition?
AGLC (Australian Guide to Legal Citation) is the standard footnote-based legal citation style used in Australian law schools and legal journals. It covers Australian cases, legislation, treaties, and secondary sources, and uses numbered footnotes rather than in-text author-date citations.
How to cite in AGLC 4th edition
Worked examples generated by CiteOrbit:
- Book
- Kuhn, Thomas S, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (University of Chicago Press, 1962)
- Journal article
- Hilal, Nishida, “Anxiety and Depression among Medical Students” (2026) 8(1) European Journal of Medical and Health Sciences 1
- Website
- CiteOrbit, “What Is a Citation?,” CiteOrbit (January 1, 2026) <https://citeorbit.com/citation-generator>
AGLC 4th edition FAQ
- Does AGLC use footnotes?
- Yes. AGLC uses numbered footnotes for all citations. A bibliography listing secondary sources is typically included at the end of the document.
- What edition of AGLC does CiteOrbit use?
- CiteOrbit uses AGLC 4th edition, the current edition published by the Melbourne University Law Review Association.
- Is AGLC used for all types of Australian legal writing?
- AGLC is the standard for Australian law journal articles and law school assessments. Court documents in Australia follow court-specific rules rather than AGLC.