MLA vs Harvard: Side-by-Side Citation Style Comparison
Most students get assigned one style and never switch. When you do switch, or when a class lets you choose, the differences between MLA 9th edition and Harvard (Cite Them Right) matter in small but graded-down ways.
In-text citation
MLA: (Brown 42)
Harvard: (Brown 2018: 42)
Watch the punctuation, the page-number prefix, and the comma placement. Those are the bits professors mark down.
Reference list entry (a book by one author)
MLA:
Brown, Brené. Dare to Lead. Random House, 2018.
Harvard:
Brown, B. (2018) Dare to lead. New York: Random House.
Author names
MLA: Last, First M. with full first names. First author inverted, subsequent authors in normal order.
Harvard: Last, F. with initials. "and" or "&" before the final author depending on guide variant.
Dates
MLA: Day Month Year format with no commas: 14 Mar. 2024. Months longer than four letters get abbreviated.
Harvard: Year only inside the in-text citation. The full Day Month Year appears in the bibliography.
Where each is used
MLA is the default in literature, languages, cultural studies, and most humanities courses.
Harvard dominates business and economics in the UK, plus many social-science programs in Australia and the EU.
Frequently asked
Can I convert a MLA paper to Harvard automatically?
No tool does this losslessly. Author order, date format, and italicization rules all shift. Our generator can produce either style from the same input fields, which is faster than trying to convert one to the other.
If my professor accepts either, which should I pick?
Pick the one most common in your field. MLA for literature, languages, cultural studies, and most humanities courses. Harvard for business and economics in the UK, plus many social-science programs in Australia and the EU. Future readers will be expecting that one.
Do the in-text rules differ as much as the reference rules?
Yes. The in-text format is usually what catches students out first, because it appears more often than the reference list.