Gather as much information from the web resource as possible. Find the name of the entire website, the name of the article on the website, the author of the resource, the publishing date, the date you accessed the website and the website URL. If the web resource you are citing does not have all of this information, it is okay to leave some fields blank.
Insert in-text citations just as you would for any other APA citation, using the author and date method. If the web resource provided you with the author's last name and publication date, simply place the information inside parentheses at the end of your paraphrase, summary or quotation. For example, if you were citing this document in-text, the parenthetical citation would look like this (Taylor, 2011).
Modify your in-text citation as necessary, accounting for information that you do not have. For example, if you are not given the author, but are given a publication date, use the title of the resource or a shortened title for longer titles in quotation marks in place of the author's last name. If you are not given a date or the author's name, use the title and the term "n.d." to signify that no date was given. For example, your citation of this text would look like this ("Cite Web Information," n.d.).
Use the information you gathered to create a reference entry for your works cited page. You should use as much information as you can possibly gather from the website, and omit sections that you do not have the information for. The Purdue Online Writing lab gives this format for the APA reference style: Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Date of publication). Title of document. Retrieved from http://web address. Remember to double space the entry.