The Quartile ranking is a way of classifying journals based on their SJR Score within a subject category. Journals in the top 25% are Q1, the next 25% are Q2, and so on through Q4.
Use the table below to browse journals by quartile and explore other metrics such as the Impact Factor and H-Index.
| # | Journals List | Quartile | SJR Score | H-Index | Impact Factor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Innovation | Q1 | 5.057 | 30 | 32.1 |
| 2 | Science Advances | Q1 | 4.598 | 214 | 13.6 |
| 3 | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | Q1 | 4.026 | 838 | 11.1 |
| 4 | Transactions of Tianjin University | Q1 | 0.893 | 24 | 7.1 |
| 5 | Tsinghua Science and Technology | Q1 | 1.648 | 52 | 6.6 |
| 6 | Fundamental Research | Q1 | 0.943 | 13 | 6.2 |
| 7 | Journal of the Indian Institute of Science | Q1 | 0.501 | 34 | 2.1 |
| 8 | Science, Technology and Society | Q1 | 0.450 | 25 | 1.9 |
A journal quartile classifies journals into four tiers (Q1, Q2, Q3, Q4) within a specific subject category, based on their SJR Score (or sometimes Impact Factor). Quartiles help researchers quickly assess where a journal stands compared to peers in the same field — not against unrelated disciplines.
| Quartile | Position | Quality Indication |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 | Top 25% | Highest-impact, most prestigious in the field |
| Q2 | 25%–50% | Strong reputation, frequently cited |
| Q3 | 50%–75% | Solid mid-tier journals |
| Q4 | Bottom 25% | Emerging or niche journals |
SCImago ranks all journals in a subject category by their SJR score, then divides them into four equal-sized groups:
A journal can have different quartiles in different subject categories — e.g., Q1 in “Cardiology” but Q2 in “Internal Medicine” if it’s indexed in both.
Q1 means the journal is in the top 25% of its subject category by SJR score. It’s the highest tier and typically the most competitive to publish in.
Generally yes — but a niche Q2 journal closely aligned with your scope may have higher acceptance rates and a more targeted audience than a broad Q1 journal where your work would be one of many.
Use our Q1 Medicine page (replace “medicine” with your subject) or the Quartile Journal Finder.
Yes — quartiles are recalculated annually. Journals can move up or down based on changes in citations and SJR scores.
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