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.
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.
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.
| Metric | Source | Citation Window | Prestige-Weighted? |
|---|---|---|---|
| SJR | Scopus / SCImago | 3 years | ✅ Yes |
| Impact Factor (JCR) | Web of Science / Clarivate | 2 years | ❌ No |
| H-Index | Scopus / WOS / Google Scholar | Lifetime | ❌ No |
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.
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.
SCImago publishes SJR scores annually, typically each summer for the previous year’s data.
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.