This post is here to soothe fears and give practical starting points, so there will be no sales pitch with reasons to edit. Skip around to whatever sections are relevant to you.
Itās easier than it looks
Getting into Wikipedia looks like walking into a minefield: with 7 million articles, finding things to create is hard; a tangle of policies, guidelines, and cultures have developed over 25 years; and stories of experienced editors biting newcomers make it look like a fiefdom. āIt takes a certain type, and Iām not that typeā is how I used to look at it. What I didnāt realize is that it doesnāt take a type; it creates a type.
Everyone sucks at editing when they start. No one has ever started out knowing what theyāre doing. Even the project itself had to learn what it was doing. Here was our article on Guinea worm disease in 2004 plagiarized verbatim from the US CDCās website. Hereās our article today. Teachers in 2005 used āWikipediaā as a slur, and they were right: editors didnāt know what they were doing. But somehow, they learned.
You might be right if you think editing wouldnāt be worth your time or too boring. You might be right if you think you canāt handle rejection from having your early edits changed or reverted (trust me: me too; it hurts). But if youāve ever told yourself that youāre not ācompetent enoughā or wouldnāt āfit inā, then youāre dead wrong; that humility is the kernel of a good editor. If you come in wanting to help build an encyclopedia, youāre prepared.
Prep work?
See what I said before: if you come in wanting to help build an encyclopedia, you are prepared. If that satisfies you, skip this section. If youāre not convinced, hereās some material to make you feel more secure:
- Wikipedia operates on five fundamental principles called pillars; this is the most useful page you can read as a new editor.
- Too vague? āI need to grind to level 50 in the tutorial dungeonā? Fine. You asked for this. We have a page called āContributing to Wikipediaā that gives you about a year of trial-and-errorās worth of information if you can digest it.
- āOkay, fine, thatās too much, but I still donāt feel ready after reading the five pillars.ā
- If you like reading, the āIntroductionā is for you.
- If you like doing, The Wikipedia Adventure is for you.
- āBut what if I get lost?ā Experienced editors (especially admins) will probably help you out if you go to their talk page with a question, but for a 100% guaranteed answer, the Teahouse is always two clicks away. The two most prominent āhostsā, Cullen328 and ColinFine, are both really nice and care a lot about the little guy.
- āBut what if I donāt fit in?ā If youāre not any of these things, you donāt need to worry about fitting in.
- āBut the markup looks too complicated.ā Thanks to the VisualEditor, you donāt need to touch the markup for most edits. 99% of the time when experienced editors use markup, itās because itās faster, not because itās impossible in the VisualEditor.
- āIām going to make mistakes.ā Literally everyone does. Here are some of the most common ones if you want to stay aware of them.
Everyone have their warm blankets on? Cool.
Getting started
Language
So you want to start but donāt know where. The biggest consideration is what language you want. The English Wikipedia is only one of many, and an account on one lets you edit on all the others. Fundamental principles are the same between Wikipedias, but policies and guidelines might change, so beware if you want to straddle multiple languages. Just because itās the biggest, donāt ever feel pressured to contribute in English; diversity is a strength, and Wikipedia needs more of it.
Registration
Before contributing anything, you should register an account. This gives you a face (a user page and user talk page), it gives you a track record that builds community trust, and it means your IP isnāt publicly logged in the edit history. It also gives you access to the āPreferencesā tab, which becomes very useful when you start learning what its options mean.
Types of contributing
So what are the best kinds of edits to make to get into editing? (Disclaimer: Almost nobody stays on the same type of editing indefinitely, and all of these ātypesā are very, very broad categorizations of millions of types.) It really depends. We keep a task center classifying different types of contributions.
What I did
I started by fixing typos and grammatical errors on articles I was already reading, then when I got more comfortable, I started adding wikilinks to articles that didnāt have enough. This continued for about a year until I made an article about a retro video game. In hindsight, it was really poor quality and a bad decision, but it evaded notice (I eventually cleaned it up some), and it was the point where I broke out into more intermediate and advanced types of contributing.
āAdvancedā versus ānon-advancedā
To be crystal clear: if you even just occasionally contribute with edits that donāt require deep knowledge of Wikipedia or intensive effort, youāre still an editor, youāre still valued, and youāre still helping. Wikipedia adheres to a hierarchy only when strictly necessary (even admins are not considered āaboveā other editors), and you arenāt treated as disposable just because you havenāt almost single-handedly made Wikipedia the best resource for US local television stations in human history (srsly gurl how the fuuuuuuuuck).
Other options
Other good options I didnāt do early on are categorization (every page goes into different categories which youāll find at the bottom) and fact-checking. Categorization is the weirdest one out of all of these since itās a major part of what makes Wikipedia tick, but almost no reader realizes how important this is. Fact-checking, meanwhile, is the most difficult of these unless youāre a subject matter expert. But itās also the most crucial one, and it teaches you a lot (it teaches you policies like verifiability and reliable sourcing, linked below). This involves adding citations where there arenāt ones, improving citations where theyāre poor or malformed, and removing or editing statements which arenāt verifiably true. Also consider looking at WikiProjects, which are informal groups working to improve some aspect of Wikipedia. (An example is Women in Red, which seeks to create more biographies on women.)
šØ Actual warning fr fr on god šØ
The only āhere be dragonsā-style warning Iāll give is to not try creating a new article until youāre really experienced. In 2025, no brand-new editor is ready for this: thereās just too much to know. Creating an article involves policies and guidelines like notability, reliable sourcing, independent sources, article titles, verifiability, no original research, etc., and for brand-new editors, this goes through a heavily backlogged process called Articles for Creation. If you want to jump into the deep end, expanding out short articles is both way easier and often way more useful than creating new articles.
So what now?
Now just ask yourself āWhatās the worst that could happen?ā If you somehow magically get in over your head, Iāll step in and save you. But if you come in wanting to help build an encyclopedia, youāre prepared.
german wikipedia now has not many authors anymore or bigger page projects. its a really authoritarian wikipedia-version.
when something happens i read the english version. often a french, spanish, italian or polish page exists. nearly never a german site!
needless to say, i stopped contributing. fuck some admins and mods there.