Home > SJR Ranking > Chemistry

SJR Ranking - Chemistry

Are you looking for a SJR Journals Ranking? Then you are in the right place.

Here, we provide an updated list of scholarly, peer-reviewed journals by ranking.

SJR (SCImago Journal Rank) is a metric used to rank scientific journals based on their citation impact and prestige. It is calculated using a similar methodology to the impact factor but incorporates additional factors such as the number of citations received from different sources and the interconnectedness of journals within a citation network.

For the most recent list of SJR Journals Ranking, see the list below.



# Journals List SJR Score H-Index Quartile
1 Chemical Reviews 18.911 790
2 Chemical Society Reviews 15.109 595 Q1
3 Nature Reviews Chemistry 10.967 90 Q1
4 Nature Chemistry 8.140 271 Q1
5 Journal of the American Chemical Society 5.945 674 Q1
6 Angewandte Chemie International Edition 5.573 612 Q1
7 Trends in Chemistry 4.435 56 Q1
8 ACS Catalysis 4.195 263 Q1
9 ACS Central Science 4.171 115 Q1
10 CCS Chemistry 3.030 34 Q1
11 Science China Chemistry 2.241 75 Q1
12 Chinese Journal of Catalysis 1.824 89 Q1
13 Wuli Huaxue Xuebao Acta Physico Chimica Sinica 1.358 47 Q1
14 Acta Chimica Sinica 0.438 44 Q2
15 Chinese Journal of Organic Chemistry 0.371 37 Q3
16 Journal of Chemical Sciences 0.291 58 Q3
17 Progress in Chemistry 0.276 36 Q3
18 Jiegou Huaxue 0.259 24 Q3
19 Indian Journal of Chemical Technology 0.162 42 Q4

What is SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)?

The SCImago Journal Rank (SJR) is a prestige metric for academic journals developed by the SCImago research group based on the Scopus database. Unlike the simple Impact Factor which counts all citations equally, SJR weighs citations based on the prestige of the citing journal — a citation from a top-tier journal counts more than one from a low-tier journal.

How is SJR Calculated?

SJR uses an algorithm similar to Google’s PageRank: each journal is assigned a score based on (a) the number of weighted citations it receives in a given year, (b) divided by the number of articles it published in the previous three years. Self-citations are limited to 33%, and the prestige of the citing source is recursively factored in. The result is a value typically between 0.0 and 100+, where higher = more prestigious.

SJR vs Impact Factor — What’s the Difference?

MetricSourceCitation WindowPrestige-Weighted?
SJRScopus / SCImago3 years✅ Yes
Impact Factor (JCR)Web of Science / Clarivate2 years❌ No
H-IndexScopus / WOS / Google ScholarLifetime❌ No

Why SJR Matters for Researchers

  • Quality signal: SJR is a quick, evidence-based way to gauge a journal’s standing in its field.
  • Open and free: SCImago Portal is free to access — unlike JCR which requires a Web of Science subscription.
  • Field normalization: SJR is normalized within a subject category, making cross-discipline comparison fairer.
  • Used in evaluation: Many institutions (especially in Europe and Latin America) use SJR for promotion, grant and tenure decisions.

SJR Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good SJR score?

An SJR score above 1.0 generally indicates an above-average journal. Top-tier journals (Nature, Science, NEJM) often have SJR > 10. Discipline-specific top journals may have SJR > 3.0.

Is SJR better than Impact Factor?

Neither is “better” outright. SJR weights prestige and is free; Impact Factor is simpler and more widely cited in academia. Best practice: use multiple metrics (SJR, IF, H-Index) together.

How often is SJR updated?

SCImago publishes SJR scores annually, typically each summer for the previous year’s data.

Can I publish in a high-SJR journal as an early-career researcher?

Yes — but the acceptance rate at top-SJR journals is often low (5–15%). Use our Advanced Journal Finder to find high-SJR journals matched to your subject and access preferences.

Tips for Choosing a High-SJR Journal

  1. Match scope precisely — high-SJR journals reject submissions outside their stated focus.
  2. Read 5 recent papers in your shortlisted journal to understand methodology expectations.
  3. Check turnaround time — some high-SJR journals have 6+ month review cycles.
  4. Combine SJR with Quartile — Q1 journals in your subject area are usually safest bets.
  5. Avoid predatory journals claiming inflated SJR scores.
Featured

Quick Journal Filter

Impact factor List