CHICAGO → MLA CONVERTER

Convert Chicago to MLA

Paste your Chicago bibliography — notes-and-bibliography or author-date — and get a clean MLA 9 Works Cited list back. The MLA container model is applied automatically.

Target Citation Style
Input Format

Tip: paste up to 100 entries at once. Plain-text references should be separated by blank lines. Try an example:

Common Style Conversions

The Bulk Citation Converter handles every direction between major styles — and any of the 10,000+ CSL styles in between. A few of the most common conversions writers run into:

Convert MLA to APA Citation

Switching disciplines or moving from a humanities course to a social-science journal? Paste your MLA Works Cited list (in plain text, BibTeX, or RIS) and the converter rewrites every entry as APA 7 — author initials, sentence-case titles, italicized journal names, and full https://doi.org/ links — in one click.

Convert APA to MLA Citation

Going the other way? Drop in your APA reference list and get a properly formatted MLA 9 Works Cited, with full first names, title case, and the MLA container model applied to journals, anthologies, and websites.

Convert Chicago to APA (and back)

Chicago notes-and-bibliography and Chicago author-date entries both convert cleanly to APA 7. The tool also handles APA → Chicago for history, theology, and humanities papers that require notes-and-bib formatting.

Convert Harvard to APA

Harvard and APA share an author-date system but differ in punctuation, ampersand use, and DOI formatting. Paste a Harvard reference list to get a clean APA 7 version — or convert APA to Harvard if your institution uses the Harvard variant.

BibTeX or RIS → Any Style

Export from Zotero, Mendeley, EndNote, or Google Scholar and paste the file contents directly. The converter auto-detects BibTeX (@article) and RIS (TY - JOUR) and renders them in your target style.

Need a Style Not Listed?

Click More in the style picker for AMA, Vancouver, IEEE, Optica, ACS, Nature, Cell, and 10,000+ other journal styles backed by the Citation Style Language (CSL) registry.

Related Tools & Guides

Citation Generator

Need a single citation rather than a bulk conversion? Paste a DOI, ISBN, URL, or title into the Citation Generator and get one fully formatted reference in any style.

Citation Checker

Before converting a list, make sure every reference is real. The Citation Checker verifies each entry against Crossref, Semantic Scholar, and PubMed.

Find Source

Missing a citation entirely? Find Source searches academic databases for peer-reviewed papers that support a claim.

Style Deep-Dives

The in-depth guides on APA, MLA, Chicago, and Harvard cover the rules behind each format the converter outputs.

Save the Result

Send a converted list straight to your Works Cited library to keep every project's reference list in one place — and re-export later in any style.

More Citation Converters

Same converter, different style pair. Pick the direction you need:

Why You Need a Bulk Citation Style Converter

Chicago to MLA usually comes up when reusing a research paper from a history course in a literature seminar, or repurposing a humanities chapter for a comparative-lit venue. MLA and Chicago notes-and-bibliography both use full first names and title case, so the field data carries over directly. The conversion work is in the punctuation pattern and the MLA container model: each source gets re-represented as a primary work nested inside one or two containers (journal, anthology, database) with MLA's specific punctuation pattern.

Paste either flavor of Chicago — NB with its footnote-style citations and periods-between-elements bibliography, or author-date with its parenthetical (Author year) — and the converter parses each entry into authors, year, title, container, volume, issue, pages, DOI, then re-renders the whole list in MLA 9. Send the result to your Works Cited library or copy it back into the manuscript.

What inputs the converter accepts

Why bulk conversion beats one-at-a-time

Most online tools handle one citation at a time. Fine if you have one reference. Nightmare if you have eighty. The Bulk Converter runs the whole list as a single pass, which is what gets you consistency: same date format, same author rule, same DOI prefix, same italicization across every entry. That's the thing reviewers actually notice. A list that's almost consistent reads worse than one that's clearly wrong.

Common workflows

Switching Journals

Submitted to Nature, got a desk reject, redirecting to Cell? Different style guide. Paste the original reference list and reformat in the target journal's style without rewriting a single entry by hand.

Thesis Style Compliance

Universities each have their own thesis style guide. Convert your finished bibliography from APA, MLA, or Chicago into your institution's required style in one paste.

Zotero / Mendeley Export

Export .bib or .ris from your reference manager and convert the contents to a clean Works Cited list in your manuscript's style — no plug-in, no Word-add-in setup.

Cross-Discipline Collaboration

Co-authoring across fields? The medical co-author wants AMA, the engineering co-author wants IEEE, the humanities co-author wants Chicago. Convert each section into the agreed-on house style for the target venue in one click.

Cleaning a Legacy Bibliography

Re-using a reference list from an earlier paper but the journal has updated to APA 7? Bulk-convert APA 6 → APA 7 to pick up the sentence-case titles, full DOI URLs, and updated author conventions.

Reading-List Reformatting

Have a reading list in BibTeX from a course? Convert it to APA or MLA so you can drop it into your own bibliography as you write — no transcription, no errors.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the parser handle Chicago footnote format?

No — the converter handles the bibliography entries, not the footnote forms. Footnotes use abbreviated citation forms after first reference; paste the bibliography section of your Chicago paper, not the footnotes themselves. MLA uses in-text parenthetical citations rather than footnotes, so the footnote-to-footnote question doesn't arise on the MLA side either.

Will I get MLA 8 or MLA 9 output?

MLA 9 by default — it's the current edition. To force MLA 8, click the MLA 8 pill before converting. The two editions differ mostly in container model wording and a handful of formatting details; the underlying field data is identical, so re-converting later is cheap if you change your mind.

What about Turabian?

Turabian is a student-focused subset of Chicago notes-and-bibliography. Paste a Turabian bibliography and the converter treats it as Chicago — output to MLA is identical to what you'd get from a full Chicago bibliography of the same entries.

What about Harvard to APA?

Harvard and APA share an author-date system but disagree on punctuation, ampersand use, the order of elements, and whether DOIs come as bare strings or full URLs. Paste any Harvard list and the converter normalizes to APA 7. APA to Harvard works the other way if your institution uses one of the Harvard variants (Cite Them Right, Anglia Ruskin, others).

Does it handle BibTeX and RIS files?

Yes. Export from Zotero, Mendeley, EndNote, JabRef, Overleaf, or any database that supports BibTeX or RIS, and paste the file contents in. The converter auto-detects the format — looking for @article or @book on the BibTeX side, TY - JOUR on the RIS side — and renders the entries in your chosen style.

What if my style isn't APA, MLA, Chicago, or Harvard?

Click More in the style picker. You'll get AMA, ACS, IEEE, Vancouver, Optica, Nature, Cell, JAMA, BMJ, plus 10,000+ other journal- and discipline-specific styles. All backed by the Citation Style Language (CSL) registry, the same registry Zotero and Mendeley use under the hood.

How accurate is the parser?

For well-formatted bibliographies in any major style, accuracy sits in the high 90s. Edge cases that sometimes want a touch-up: very old reference lists with hand-typed inconsistencies, non-Latin-script entries (Cyrillic, Chinese), house styles that mix numbered and author-date conventions in the same list. The converter shows you the parsed fields alongside the formatted output, so you can catch an entry that looks off before it ships.

Is there a limit on how many references I can convert at once?

Practically no. Lists of 100+ entries are routine. For very long bibliographies (500+), break them into batches of a few hundred. The response stays snappy and you can spot any parser hiccups before they propagate. Each batch is independent — no ordering or consistency penalty for splitting.

Will my data be saved or used to train models?

No. Pasted bibliographies live in memory while the request runs and are gone once the response returns. We don't retain the input, the parsed records, or the formatted output beyond the active session. Nothing trains a model. The privacy policy spells the specifics out.

How much does it cost?

The converter runs on the citation processor itself — no AI credits required. Conversion is free. You may see a prompt to sign in if you want to save converted lists to your Works Cited library, but the conversion stays free either way. Top-up packs for the AI-powered tools live on the pricing page.