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May 21, 2026Updated: May 2026 · For Academic Year 2026
If you have ever looked up a journal and seen a fee of £2,500 just to publish your own research, your first reaction was probably somewhere between confusion and mild panic. That fee has a name, an Article Processing Charge, and understanding it properly is one of the most useful things you can do before you decide where to submit your work.
This guide covers what APCs actually are, why they exist, what they cost at the major publishers in 2026, and, most importantly, how to make sure you are never paying one out of your own pocket.
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Jump directly to any section:
- What Is an Article Processing Charge?
- Why Do Journals Charge APCs?
- APC Costs at Major Publishers (2026)
- How to Fund Your APC Without Paying It Yourself
- Can You Publish Open Access Without Paying an APC?
- APC Waivers: How to Request One
- Open Access Models: Quick Reference
- FAQs Researchers Ask
Ready to submit? Use our plagiarism checker and AI detector before you send anything to a journal.
What Is an Article Processing Charge? (Editors' Summary 2026)
An Article Processing Charge (APC) is a fee that journals charge authors to make their research freely available to anyone online, immediately upon publication, no subscription, no paywall.
The logic is straightforward, even if the amounts are not always: someone has to pay for the editorial system, peer review coordination, copyediting, typesetting, and digital hosting. In a traditional subscription journal, that cost is covered by libraries paying access fees. In an open-access journal, the same cost is covered by the author, or more precisely, by whoever is funding the author's research.
- APCs are not normally paid by students or early-career researchers → there are specific funding routes set up to cover them. More on this below.
- The APC is completely separate from any university fees → it is purely the journal's publishing fee, not connected to dissertation editing, proofreading, or any other pre-submission service.
- Not all open access requires an APC → Diamond OA and Green OA routes cost nothing. The table below explains the difference.
- APC costs vary enormously → from £370 at some SAGE journals to over £8,000 for Nature-branded titles. Always check the specific journal, never assume from the publisher's name alone.
- Your university library is your first stop → most UK universities have agreements with major publishers that mean affiliated researchers pay zero APC. Check before you submit anywhere.
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Why Do Journals Charge APCs?
The shift to open access publishing has been building for around twenty years, driven largely by research funders who argued, reasonably, that publicly funded research should be publicly accessible. The result is a system where many journals now operate on an author-pays model. This has not eliminated publishing costs. It has simply moved the invoice from the reader to the writer.
There is a legitimate and ongoing debate about whether current APC levels are justified. Many researchers argue that commercial publishers charge far more than their actual costs warrant, particularly given that peer review is conducted for free by academics. That debate is unresolved. What matters practically is that APCs exist, they are required by many journals, and you need a clear plan for how to handle them before you submit.
APC Costs at Major Publishers (2026)
Prices vary significantly across publishers and between journals within the same publisher's portfolio. These are realistic ranges based on 2026 data. Always check the specific journal's APC page — never assume from the publisher name alone.
| Publisher | Typical APC Range (GBP) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Elsevier | £1,500 – £3,500 | Gold OA journals are at the higher end; hybrid OA varies widely by title |
| Springer Nature | £1,200 – £3,000 | Large OA portfolio; many mid-range journals at the lower end |
| Wiley | £1,500 – £3,000 | Wide variation across their catalogue; check individual journal pages |
| Taylor & Francis | £1,100 – £2,500 | Often slightly more affordable than Elsevier or Wiley; uncapped UK agreements in place |
| SAGE | £370 – £2,590 | Lower entry point than most; strong social science and education portfolio |
| MDPI | £800 – £1,500 | Fully OA publisher; generally lower than major commercial publishers |
| Nature-branded journals | £8,000+ | Nature, Cell Reports, The Lancet, and similar high-profile titles are at the extreme end |
The variation within a single publisher can be enormous. An Elsevier journal you have never heard of might charge £1,600; a flagship title might charge three times that. Always verify on the specific journal's APC information page before making any submission decision.
How to Fund Your APC Without Paying It Yourself
Most guides list funding options in bullet points and move on. Here is a more specific explanation of how each route actually works, and what you need to do to access it.
1. Your University Library — Start Here
Most UK universities have either a central open access fund or a transformative agreement (also called a read-and-publish deal) with major publishers. Both routes can cover your APC entirely.
A central OA fund is a pot of money the library holds specifically for publication fees. You apply, explain your situation, and if the journal is eligible and funds are available, the library pays.
A transformative agreement works differently; the university has pre-negotiated a deal with a publisher, meaning articles by affiliated researchers can be published open access in eligible journals with no additional APC. The cost is baked into the library's existing subscription. As a corresponding author, you may not even see an invoice: you tick a box during submission confirming your institutional affiliation, and the fee is handled automatically.
What to do: check your library's open access page for the full list of publishers covered. If you are planning to publish your dissertation research, speak to your university's scholarly communications librarian before you choose where to submit. They will tell you exactly which journals are covered, and that can genuinely influence your decision.
2. Research Funders: UKRI, Wellcome, Horizon Europe
If your research was funded by a major funding body, open access publication is almost certainly a condition of that funding — and the funder usually provides money to cover APCs.
- UKRI mandates that all peer-reviewed outputs acknowledging UKRI funding must be published open access. UKRI provides block grants to universities specifically for APCs. If your work carries a UKRI acknowledgement, your university's research office has access to this funding; you just need to ask.
- Wellcome Trust has a similar policy. Grant holders can use Wellcome funds to cover APCs, and Wellcome has agreements with several publishers that reduce costs further.
- Horizon Europe requires open access and allows APCs to be charged to project budgets.
What to do: identify who funded your research, find their open access policy on their website, and follow the process they describe. Most have clear guidance. If yours does not, email their grants team directly.
3. Academic Societies and Professional Bodies
Some professional bodies and learned societies offer small grants or publication awards that can be used toward APCs. These are less common and often oversubscribed, but they are worth checking for your specific discipline.
What to do: ask your supervisor whether any discipline-specific funding of this kind exists. They will usually know if it does.
Can You Publish Open Access Without Paying an APC?
Yes, and this is genuinely underused by students.
Diamond OA journals charge nothing to authors and nothing to readers. They are usually run by academic societies, universities, or non-profit organisations.
The Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) lets you filter specifically for journals that charge no APC. In the humanities and social sciences, diamond OA journals are relatively common. In STEM, less so, but they do exist.
Cost: Zero. Published immediately. Good option when APC funding is unavailable, and you want immediate open access.
You publish in a standard subscription journal (no APC), and separately deposit a version of your article — usually the accepted manuscript, not the final typeset version — in your university's institutional repository.
After an embargo period (typically 6–24 months), that version becomes freely available. It is not immediately open access, but it costs nothing and meets the requirements of most UK funders.
Cost: Zero. Best for: students who cannot secure APC funding but do not want to limit themselves to diamond OA journals.
For most students without dedicated research funding, the realistic choice is between green OA and diamond OA — both of which cost nothing. The OA models table below summarises all four options side by side.
APC Waivers: How to Request One
Most major publishers have a waiver policy. Using it is not complicated or embarrassing — it is a standard part of the publishing process. Here is what each major publisher offers and how to make a request that is likely to succeed.
- Elsevier → full waivers for authors from World Bank-designated low-income and lower-middle-income countries; discretionary waivers on a case-by-case basis.
- Springer Nature → similar country-based policies plus discretionary routes; waivers reviewed at submission stage.
- Wiley → automatic waivers for corresponding authors from low-income countries; discretionary consideration for unfunded early-career researchers.
- MDPI → a limited number of waivers for genuinely unfunded early-career researchers; apply at submission.
- SAGE → waivers available through a formal application; also participates in many UK institutional agreements that effectively eliminate the charge.
Three things that make a waiver request more likely to succeed:
- Request it at submission, not after acceptance. Almost every journal requires waiver requests before the article is accepted. Requesting retroactively almost never works.
- Be specific. "I am a PhD student. My university does not have an open access fund. I have no research grant to cover this cost." That is a stronger request than a vague appeal to financial hardship.
- Provide evidence if asked. A department letter or written confirmation that no institutional funds are available strengthens the application significantly.
If a waiver is refused and green OA is not an option, consider whether a different journal in the same discipline might be more flexible. Some journals are considerably more generous with waivers than others — the DOAJ can help you find them.
Open Access Models: Quick Reference
Four publishing routes — two of which cost nothing. Use this table to decide which model fits your situation before you choose a journal.
| Model | APC Required? | When Does It Go Live? | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gold OA | Yes — paid by author or funder | Immediately on publication | Researchers with funder or institutional APC coverage |
| Hybrid OA | Yes — for the individual article in a subscription journal | Immediately for that article | Authors wanting immediate OA in an established subscription journal |
| Green OA | No | After embargo (typically 6–24 months) | Students without APC funding meet most UK funder OA requirements |
| Diamond OA | No | Immediately on publication | Students wanting immediate free OA with no cost; check DOAJ |
Before You Submit: Get Your Manuscript Right First
Whatever route you take on APCs, your article needs to be in strong shape before it reaches a journal editor. A poorly edited manuscript can be rejected at desk review before peer review even begins — which makes the APC question entirely moot.
- Proofread your manuscript → writing must be clean, your argument well-structured, and referencing accurate. Our proofreading and editing service is used by many researchers at exactly this stage — a UK editor reviews the language, tightens the argument, and flags anything that would catch an editor's attention for the wrong reasons.
- Run a plagiarism check → journals increasingly use similarity-detection tools at submission. An unexpected flag at that stage is far worse than catching it beforehand. Use our plagiarism checker before you submit.
- Run an AI content check → most journals now screen for AI-generated content. Use our free AI content detector to identify any flagged sections before the editor sees them.
- Check journal scope and APC before you start rewriting → knowing your target journal's APC situation before conversion saves you from targeting a journal you cannot afford to publish in.
Reviewed May 2026 · Premier Dissertations Academic Editorial Team
FAQs Researchers Ask About Article Processing Charges
Direct answers to the questions students and early-career researchers ask most about APCs.
What is an article processing charge?
An APC is a fee paid to a journal to make your article open access — freely available to anyone immediately upon publication, with no subscription or paywall. It covers the journal's editorial, typesetting, and hosting costs. In traditional subscription journals, those costs are paid by libraries. In open-access journals, they are paid by the author or their funder.
How much do APCs typically cost?
Most journals charge between £800 and £3,500. High-impact titles like those in the Nature family can exceed £8,000. MDPI and SAGE journals tend to sit at the lower end; Elsevier and Wiley flagship titles at the higher end. Always check the specific journal's APC page — the publisher name alone tells you very little about the actual charge.
Who actually pays the APC?
Usually, a research funder, a university open access fund, or an institutional transformative agreement. Students and early-career researchers should rarely pay APCs with personal funds. Your first step is always to check your university library's open access page and your funder's OA policy before assuming you are liable for the cost.
Can I publish open access for free?
Yes. Diamond OA journals charge nothing to authors or readers — the DOAJ lists them all and lets you filter by subject area. Green OA lets you publish in a subscription journal at no cost, then deposit your accepted manuscript in your institution's repository after an embargo period (typically 6–24 months). Both routes are legitimate and meet most UK funder requirements.
What happens if I genuinely cannot pay and a waiver is refused?
Go the green OA route. Submit to a subscription journal, then deposit your accepted manuscript in your institution's repository after the embargo period. Your research will still reach readers freely — it just takes a slightly longer route. This meets most UK funder OA policies.
Can I include APC costs in a grant application?
Yes. UKRI, Wellcome, and most major UK funders explicitly allow APCs as a budget line in grant proposals. If you are applying for funding and open access publication is a condition of the funder, include a realistic APC estimate in your application budget from the start.
What is a transformative agreement, and how do I know if my university has one?
A transformative agreement (also called a read-and-publish deal) is a contract between your university library and a publisher that covers both journal access and open access publication for affiliated researchers. If your institution has one with your target publisher, you may pay zero APC regardless of the journal's standard rate. Check your university library's open access page or contact your scholarly communications librarian directly.
Is the APC connected to dissertation editing or proofreading fees?
No. The APC is purely the journal's publishing fee and has no connection to any pre-submission services such as editing, proofreading, or formatting. These are entirely separate costs, and many students use both — a proofreading service before submission and then a funder-covered APC at the point of acceptance.
Related Guides and Further Reading
More resources to help you navigate the journal submission and publishing process.
Reviewed May 2026 · Premier Dissertations Academic Editorial Team
Final Thought
APCs are not a cost you are expected to absorb personally. The system is set up, imperfectly, but genuinely, to fund open access publishing through institutions and research funders rather than individual researchers.
Before you submit anywhere, spend one hour checking three questions: does your library have a transformative agreement with this publisher? Does your funder's OA policy cover this journal? Is there a waiver you can apply for? In most cases, at least one of those questions will have a useful answer. And if none of them does, green OA remains a solid, cost-free path to reaching readers.
Quick reminder: check your library's open access agreements before choosing a journal; run a plagiarism check and AI content check before submitting; and request any APC waiver at submission, not after acceptance. For full support from journal selection to final publication, our Scopus publication support team can guide you through every step.
Reviewed May 2026 · Premier Dissertations Academic Editorial Team
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