Follow APA format. When citing a web page in the body of your research paper, use the author's name and the date the website was written just as you would for any other source. In your footnotes or endnotes, you need to list, in order: the author, date of publication of the website, page title, and the Web address. The first line is flush against the left margin, subsequent lines are indented five spaces.
Use MLA format. To cite a Web resource in the text of your paper in MLA style, list the author's name, the article name and the website name. You do not need to include the URL in an in-text citation. For the Works Cited page, list: author, article name in quotation marks, name or title of the website, and date you accessed the material. If your instructor requires the URL, include it at the end in angle brackets (< >). Again, the first line of your entry is flush against the left margin and all other lines are indented five spaces.
Be precise with Chicago style. The Chicago style of resource citation uses footnotes or endnotes in addition to a bibliography at the end of the research paper. For a footnote or endnote, place the number in the text at the end of the sentence that contains the citation. The first line of the footnote is indented (your word processing program should do this automatically) and the footnote should read: the author's name (first name, then last name), title of the Web page in quotation marks, publishing organization or name of website in italic font, publication date in regular font, and the date you accessed the Web source. The bibliography entry is similar, starting with the author's name (last name, then first name), and then repeating the information exactly as it appears in the footnote. Indentation follows the formats for APA and MLA.