How to Calculate Your H-Index (3 Free Methods)

There are several ways to calculate or look up your h-index. Here are the three best free methods, from easiest to most comprehensive.

Method 2: Google Scholar Profile

If you have a Google Scholar profile, your h-index is calculated automatically.

2Click “My Profile” (or create one)
3Your h-index appears on your profile page

Pros: Comprehensive coverage, includes preprints
Cons: Requires account setup, only shows YOUR h-index

Method 3: Manual Calculation

You can calculate h-index manually from a list of your publications:

1List all your papers with their citation counts
2Sort by citations (highest first)
3Find the point where paper rank = citations

Example: If your 15th paper has 15+ citations, but your 16th paper has fewer than 16 citations, your h-index is 15.

Cons: Time-consuming, error-prone

Why H-Indexes Differ Between Sources

You might notice different h-index values on different platforms:

  • Google Scholar: Most comprehensive, includes everything
  • Scopus: Curated journals only, more selective
  • Web of Science: Most selective, highest quality threshold
  • OpenAlex: Open alternative, ~200M publications

There’s no “correct” h-index — each source has tradeoffs.

🎓 Turn Your H-Index Into a Video

Once you know your h-index, why not visualize your entire research career? Create an animated Graduation video showing your citation race, top papers, and global impact.

Create Your Graduation Video →

See Your Research Impact

Turn your h-index into a personalized video

The Emeritus template visualizes your citations, collaborations, and global research impact in a 60-second animated video.

See Templates →

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