DOI vs Indexing: What a DOI Proves and What It Does Not
Jun 8, 2026

DOI vs indexing is a simple topic that causes a lot of confusion for authors.

A DOI looks official. It gives a paper a permanent digital identifier. It helps readers find a publication. But it does not prove that the paper is indexed in Scopus, Web of Science, EI Compendex or any other major database.

What Is a DOI?

DOI stands for Digital Object Identifier. It is used to identify digital research outputs such as journal articles, conference papers, datasets and book chapters.

A DOI can help with:

  • Persistent linking
  • Citation accuracy
  • Publisher records
  • Online discovery
  • Metadata tracking

It is useful, but it is not the same as database indexing.

What Is Indexing?

Indexing means a paper, journal or proceedings source is included in a database or discovery system. Examples include Scopus, Web of Science, EI Compendex, PubMed and others.

Indexing usually depends on:

  • Source selection
  • Publisher metadata
  • Database policies
  • Coverage years
  • Review and processing timelines

A DOI can support discovery, but it does not replace these checks.

Why Authors Mix Them Up

Authors often mix DOI and indexing because both appear after publication. A paper may receive a DOI quickly, while database indexing takes longer or may not happen at all.

This creates a common misunderstanding:

  • DOI means the paper is published
  • DOI does not mean the paper is indexed
  • DOI does not guarantee Scopus coverage
  • DOI does not guarantee Web of Science coverage
  • DOI does not guarantee EI Compendex coverage

What Authors Should Check Instead

To verify indexing, check:

  • Official database record
  • Journal or proceedings source title
  • ISSN or ISBN
  • Publisher
  • Coverage years
  • Paper title and DOI search results
  • Library-verifiable information

FAQs

Q: Does every published paper have a DOI?
A: No. Many do, but not all publications use DOI registration.

Q: Does a DOI mean the paper is in Scopus?
A: No. A DOI does not prove Scopus indexing.

Q: Can an indexed paper have no DOI?
A: It can happen, depending on the source and publication type.

Q: Should authors ask for DOI or indexing proof?
A: Ask for both if both matter. They prove different things.

Do Not Confuse the Identifier with the Index

A DOI is useful, but it is not an indexing certificate. Authors should check official database records to understand DOI vs indexing.