If you are citing an entire website, it is not necessary to include a citation for the website in your reference list. Simply include the title and address within the text of your paper.
Example:
The Safe Child website includes practical information for parents on how to help their children cope with bullying (http://safechild.org).
When citing specific information from individual web pages, use the following elements to create your citation. For more information on creating citations when some of the elements are missing, see the APA Style Blog post on Missing Pieces.
Note: Citations with more than one line of text should have a hanging indent of 1/2 inch or 5 spaces.
Important Elements
Note on titles: only italicize the title of a document that stands alone (books, reports, etc.), but not the title of a document that is part of a greater whole. If you are not sure whether something stands alone (such as a document on a website), choose not to italicize.
Web page with author
Kraizer, S. (2011). Safety on the Internet. Retrieved from http://safechild.org/categoryparents/safety-on-the-internet/
Web page with group author
American Cancer Society (2015). Genetics and cancer. Retrieved from http://www.cancer.org/cancer/cancercauses/geneticsandcancer/index
Web page with no author
Claustrophobia (2014). Retrieved from http://www.nhs.uk/conditions/claustrophobia/Pages/Introduction.aspx
For more information on citing social media such as Facebook and Twitter, see the APA Style blog post on How to Cite Social Media.
Blog Post:
McAdoo, T. (2014, February 4). How to Cite a Hashtag in #APA Style [Blog post]. Retrieved from http://blog.apastyle.org/apastyle/social-media/
YouTube Video:
Clarkson, R.G. (2009, July 20). [RobertGClarkson]. Claustrophobia: 7 Quick Tactics to Stop the Panic [Video file]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jOXKzwM-Ns
Howcast. (2019, October 29). How to Recognize Claustrophoba Symptoms [Video file]. Retrived from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6t5QL3ksAPA