Does MLA use footnotes or endnotes?

MLA uses footnotes or endnotes as optional ways to share additional information with readers without interrupting the flow of ideas. MLA footnotes and endnotes are not for documenting sources like MLA in-text citations.

Footnotes go at the bottom of each page, and endnotes go on a separate page entitled “Notes” before the Works Cited page. Books and academic journals in MLA style use endnotes.

For both systems, a superscript number in the text directs readers to a corresponding note with the same number.

MLA footnotes or endnotes examples
Superscript number in the text:

In the long term, regenerative practices can improve profits for small family farms by minimizing equipment and supply costs.⁵

Endnote/footnote: 

⁵ See also Jones 144-45 and Xiao 23-27 for additional perspectives on regenerative agriculture.

MLA accepts either system as long as the document stays consistent with just one of them. (You can use footnotes or endnotes, but not both in the same document.)

When you’re writing footnotes or endnotes, QuillBot’s free Grammar Checker can help you avoid errors.