There are 7,014,669 articles on the English Wikipedia, and 50,000 (around 0.7%) have been selected as vital articles to the project. They are organized into five levels: Level 1 contains the ten most vital articles, Level 2 contains the one hundred most vital articles (and by definition, includes the articles of Level 1), and each further level expands on the selection of the previous level, as follows:
Vital article level |
Target number of vital articles |
Current situation (May 25, 2025) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Current number |
At or above![]() |
At or above![]() | ||
1 | 10 | 10 | 10 (100%) | 6 (60%) |
2 | 100 | 100 | 78 (78%) | 28 (28%) |
3 | 1,000 | 998 | 640 (64%) | 222 (22%) |
4 | 10,000 | 10,016 | * | * |
5 | 50,000 | 49,841 | * | * |
* Accurate quality stats, across all categories, require further tooling at this level.
The five nested vital article levels are meant to give direction to the prioritization of improvements of English Wikipedia articles (e.g. which articles to bring to WP:GA and WP:FA status), to provide a measurement of quality of overall English Wikipedia (e.g. what proportion of the most important articles are at GA and FA status), and to serve as a centralized watchlist of English Wikipedia's most important articles. Unlike the list of articles every Wikipedia should have, they are tailored to the English Wikipedia and are actively maintained by the dedicated WikiProject Vital Articles.
The key criteria in determining whether an article is vital are:
All Wikipedia extended confirmed editors are welcome to propose an article that should be added, removed, or demoted from one of the Level 1-4 vital article lists (which are ECP-protected from here), and/or !vote or comment on any existing proposal. Any editor can make a proposal at Level 5.
A number of guidelines/practices have been agreed regarding the proposal process:
When proposing to add or remove a particular topic from the vital articles list, we strongly recommend that the proposer review and compare the other articles in the same category to get a better sense of what is considered vital in that area and that they also check the talk page archives for that Level to see if the topic was previously proposed, and what was the resulting discussion. Use the 'VA link' template to allow editors to easily check its location (e.g. Internet 3).
A proposed vital article must exist at a lower level before being nominated at a higher level, as agreed here. For example, a proposal to move the Level 5 vital article Twitter 5 to Level 3 could not happen until it had first been successfully proposed for Level 4. Only after it had been added to the Level 4 list, could it then be proposed to Level 3.
Levels 1 to 4 are usually at their full quota, and any nomination to 'Add' a topic to one of these Levels is often accompanied by a proposal to 'Remove' an existing topic. For example, a Level 3 proposal could say: "Add Steve Jobs 4" and Remove Henry Ford
3". While it is not obligatory to frame proposals as a swap (and not needed if the proposal is to 'Remove'), it is recommended, as some discussions may fail to progress (and be closed as 'no consensus'), as no agreement could be reached on a suitable swap candidate.
There is currently no hard limit to how soon a failed proposal can be retried, and articles can occasionally see major swings in coverage or notability. However, editors are strongly discouraged from knowingly repeating a recent proposal (active within the past 6 months is a good rule-of-thumb). If someone does happen to repeat a proposal, assume good faith in the absence of disruptive behavior and include a link to the previous discussion from the archives.
At Level 5, the size of the list sometimes makes comparing articles on a case-by-case basis impractical. Instead, proposers might suggest a rule or principle for their changes, then bundle several relevant articles together. Batch proposals have several advantages, such as conserving talk-page space and keeping similar discussions together, but they can also become unwieldy if too large or when discussions fragment. Editors are encouraged to use their best judgment when bundling proposals although 3-10 articles is often a good rule-of-thumb.
Each level of the vital articles list implements a target number of articles a.k.a. quota. These not only characterize the relative vitality levels, but also discipline the selection process.
At Levels 1 and 2, the lists are very stable and small, resulting in a rigid target for the level as a whole. The list size will likely never deviate from the target, and one should expect all proposals to effectively swap one article for another. However, the smaller list size also allows for comparing articles case-by-case, which means the article count for specific categories, while very stable, is mostly for reporting purposes.
Targets at Level 3 work mostly the same, only the list is slightly more fluid. As a result, the list size may fluctuate around the overall target by a few articles. While swap candidates are always encouraged, they aren't absolutely required for Level 3 proposals either.
Starting with Level 4, the vital articles list is subdivided into several pages by category. The sizes of Levels 4 and 5 also make direct comparison across fields impractical. As a result, the overall level target becomes largely a data-point and article counts by category are more influential.
These category counts function more like quotas, with some variance in list size tolerated. For example, Level 5 considers a category "close to quota" with an article count anywhere between 98% and 102% of the formal target. This flexibility also means proposals can usually be split into separate additions or removals, even with a swap in mind, in order to minimize conflicted or partial votes.
However, any tolerance in category size should not be considered an unofficial quota; it only exists to add slack to change procedures at the larger levels. Once a category is above its quota by more than a few articles, please focus new proposals on removals, or at least balance each addition proposal with multiple removals.
The category quotas are also adjusted through distinct quota proposals. Proposers can have several reasons to reallocate slots between categories, but one accepted rule is that quota proposals should be considered independently of article proposals. Anyone that believes a category should be resized based on the articles it includes or lacks is encouraged to propose the relevant article changes first, then affirm the new sizes with a quota proposal.
At Level 5 specifically, the project has discussed and affirmed some additional guidelines:
A number of guidelines/practices have been agreed regarding the closing of proposals:
Any Level 1–4 proposal for addition, removal or swap proposals can be closed by any editor, including editors who have already !voted in the proposal (i.e. the concept of WP:INVOLVED does not arise in vital article closures), provided it meets the following specific criteria:
Any Level 5 proposal for addition, removal or swap proposals can also be closed by any editor, including editors who have already !voted in the proposal, provided it meets the following specific criteria (these are different from Level 4 due to the greater frequency of proposals at Level 5):
For moves and other reorganization within a single subpage, discussion is optional. Moves between subpages should preferably be announced on the talk page in advance. If a move between subpages involves enough entries to require a quota reallocation, they require as many votes as additions and removals.
Auto-archival has been enabled on many discussion pages of the Vital Articles project. However, some areas (such as Level 5) have suspended it for now due to a wide spread in how quickly proposals are resolved. Even on pages where an archival bot is active, editors may want to archive closed discussions themselves in order to de-clutter the page.
Here are some suggestions for anyone who wants to manually archive some closed proposals:
There have been many initiatives around improving vital article quality which are listed at Wikipedia:WikiProject Vital Articles, including:
Rewards for improving vital articles include:
Please contact the prize sponsors for additional information. Remember to adhere to Wikipedia:Conflict of interest, and to exercise common sense.
The following relevant userboxes are available:
Template | Appearance | Purpose | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
{{User Vital}} |
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For members of vital articles. | ||
{{Vital userbox}} |
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Good old userbox, given to those that have done a good job. | ||
{{Good Vital infobox}} |
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Userbox for those that have successfully nominated a Vital good article. | ||
{{Featured Vital infobox}} |
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Userbox for those that have successfully nominated a Vital featured article. |