Genes & Development Impact Factor
Genes & Development impact factor is 7.7 (JCR 2024). Q1, rank 3/39 in Dev Bio. Five-year JIF 10.2. See the trend and what editors want.
Research Scientist, Neuroscience & Cell Biology
Author context
Works across neuroscience and cell biology, with direct expertise in preparing manuscripts for PNAS, Nature Neuroscience, Neuron, eLife, and Nature Communications.
Journal evaluation
Want the full journal picture?
See scope, selectivity, submission context, and what editors actually want before you decide whether the journal is realistic.
What Is the Genes & Development Impact Factor?
Genes & Development has a 2024 JCR impact factor of 7.7 and a five-year JIF of 10.2. It ranks Q1, 3rd out of 39 journals in Developmental Biology. Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press (CSHLP), it's a small-volume, highly selective journal focused on gene regulation, chromatin biology, and developmental mechanisms.
That gap between the two-year (7.7) and five-year (10.2) impact factor tells you something important. Genes & Development papers don't burn bright and fade. They get cited for years. A 2019 paper on chromatin remodeling or transcription factor networks published here is still accumulating citations today.
Impact Factor Trend (2019-2024)
Year | JIF | Change |
|---|---|---|
2024 | 7.7 | -3.0 |
2023 | 10.5 | +2.2 |
2022 | 8.1 | -3.5 |
2021 | 11.4 | +1.8 |
2020 | 9.4 | +1.0 |
2019 | 8.5 | - |
The oscillation between 7.7 and 11.4 looks volatile, but it's what happens when a journal publishes 150-200 papers per year. A single highly cited review or breakthrough paper from two years ago can swing the JIF by 2-3 points. Larger-volume journals smooth this out across thousands of papers. Genes & Development doesn't have that cushion.
Look at the five-year window instead. A consistent 10.2 across five years means the journal's actual citation impact is closer to 10 than to 7.7. The 2024 figure is a down year, not a trend.
How Genes & Development Compares
Journal | JIF 2024 | 5-Year JIF | Quartile | Focus | Volume |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Genes & Development | 7.7 | 10.2 | Q1 | Gene regulation, development | ~175/yr |
Developmental Cell | 10.1 | 11.8 | Q1 | Cell biology of development | ~300/yr |
8.3 | 10.6 | Q1 | Broad molecular biology | ~400/yr | |
Development | 3.4 | 4.1 | Q1 | Developmental biology | ~600/yr |
Molecular Cell | 14.0 | 15.8 | Q1 | Molecular mechanisms | ~250/yr |
The key competitor is Developmental Cell. Both journals publish at the intersection of gene regulation and development, and many papers could fit either venue. The distinction: Genes & Development leans more toward the molecular mechanism (how does this transcription factor work?), while Developmental Cell leans more toward the cell biology (how does this cell decide its fate?).
Against Molecular Cell, Genes & Development is a step down in raw IF but a step up in specificity for developmental gene regulation. If your paper is about transcription in a developmental context, Genes & Development may give you a more engaged audience than Molecular Cell, where developmental biology competes with cancer biology, structural biology, and other areas for attention.
The Cold Spring Harbor Connection
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press isn't just a publisher. It's the publishing arm of one of biology's most storied research institutions. CSHL runs some of the most important scientific meetings in molecular biology, and the lab's research programs in gene expression, cancer, neuroscience, and plant biology are world-class.
What this means for Genes & Development:
- The editorial network is deep. Editors are active CSHL-affiliated scientists with extensive contacts in the gene regulation and developmental biology communities. They know who's doing important work and can identify appropriate reviewers quickly.
- Meeting connections matter. CSHL meetings on transcription, chromatin, and developmental biology are premier events. Papers presented at these meetings sometimes end up in Genes & Development. If you're in this community, the journal is a natural fit.
- Quality by association. Other CSHLP journals include Genome Research (IF 6.2), RNA, and Learning & Memory. The press has a reputation for rigorous editorial standards across all its journals.
What Gets Published (and What Gets Rejected)
Genes & Development's scope is specific: molecular mechanisms of gene regulation in biological contexts, with emphasis on development, chromatin, and transcription.
Papers that do well:
- Mechanistic studies of transcription factor function in developmental systems
- Chromatin remodeling, histone modifications, and epigenetic regulation with biological phenotypes
- Non-coding RNA biology with functional consequences for gene expression
- Signaling pathways that control gene expression programs during differentiation
- Novel regulatory mechanisms (enhancer logic, 3D genome organization, phase separation in transcription)
Papers that get desk-rejected:
- Descriptive studies without mechanism. Identifying that a gene is expressed during development isn't enough. You need to show how it works.
- Purely computational predictions without experimental validation. Bioinformatics alone doesn't cut it here.
- Cancer biology without a developmental angle. If the story is about oncogenesis rather than normal developmental processes, consider Molecular Cell or Cell Reports.
- Cell biology papers where the gene regulation is secondary. If the paper is really about cytoskeletal dynamics or membrane trafficking that happens to involve a transcription factor, Developmental Cell is the better target.
A specific pattern to watch: Papers that describe a new function for a known transcription factor in an underexplored tissue or organism. These can work if the mechanism is surprising, but if you're basically showing that "Transcription Factor X also does something in Tissue Y," that's incremental for Genes & Development. Frame the story around what the mechanism reveals about gene regulation principles, not just the specific biological finding.
Acceptance Rate and Review Process
Genes & Development accepts roughly 15-20% of submissions. That's selective but not brutal. The journal receives fewer submissions than larger competitors, which means the editorial team can give each paper careful consideration.
Review process:
- Editorial triage: 1-2 weeks
- External review: 3-6 weeks (2-3 reviewers, typically deep experts)
- First decision: 4-8 weeks total
- Revision: one round is standard, with specific and achievable requests
- Total submission to acceptance: 3-6 months
Reviewers tend to be constructive. Because Genes & Development attracts specialists, reviewer reports are usually detailed and focused on the specific biology rather than generic criticism. The journal's transparent revision process means editors take reviewer disagreements seriously and often make the final call based on the science rather than reviewer unanimity.
Submission Strategy
If you're weighing Genes & Development against alternatives, consider these factors:
Aim for Genes & Development when:
- Your paper reveals a new mechanism of gene regulation with developmental significance
- The work combines molecular detail (biochemistry, structural data, genomics) with biological phenotypes
- You're in the transcription, chromatin, or developmental gene regulation community
- You value the Cold Spring Harbor brand and editorial network
- Your paper didn't quite make it at Molecular Cell or Nature Cell Biology and you want a strong landing spot
Consider alternatives when:
- The biology is broader than gene regulation (try Current Biology or PNAS)
- The mechanism is clear but the developmental context is minimal (try EMBO Journal or Molecular Cell)
- You need the widest possible audience for a strong result (try PNAS or Nature Communications)
Practical Verdict
Genes & Development at 7.7 is one of those journals where the impact factor undersells the reality. The five-year JIF of 10.2 is more accurate. The h-index of 593, the CSHLP brand, and nearly 2 million total citations put this journal in a different class than the 7.7 suggests.
For researchers in gene regulation, chromatin biology, and developmental mechanisms, it remains one of the most respected venues. Small, focused, and built on deep expertise rather than high volume. That's not a weakness. It's the whole point.
- OpenAlex - Genes & Development: 8,827 works, h-index 593, 1,939,250 citations
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press journal portfolio - editorial network and meeting affiliations
- Genes & Development author guidelines - scope, review process, article types
Preparing a manuscript on gene regulation? Our AI manuscript diagnostic evaluates your paper's methodology, scope, and journal fit in about 30 minutes for $29.
Sources
- 1. Clarivate Journal Citation Reports 2024 - Genes & Development: JIF 7.7, five-year JIF 10.2, Q1 Developmental Biology
Reference library
Use the core publishing datasets alongside this guide
This article answers one part of the publishing decision. The reference library covers the recurring questions that usually come next: how selective journals are, how long review takes, and what the submission requirements look like across journals.
Dataset / reference guide
Peer Review Timelines by Journal
Reference-grade journal timeline data that authors, labs, and writing centers can cite when discussing realistic review timing.
Dataset / benchmark
Biomedical Journal Acceptance Rates
A field-organized acceptance-rate guide that works as a neutral benchmark when authors are deciding how selective to target.
Reference table
Journal Submission Specs
A high-utility submission table covering word limits, figure caps, reference limits, and formatting expectations.
Before you upload
Want the full journal picture?
Scope, selectivity, what editors want, common rejection reasons, and submission context, all in one place.
These pages attract evaluation intent more than upload-ready intent.
Anthropic Privacy Partner. Zero-retention manuscript processing.
Where to go next
Start here
Same journal, next question
Supporting reads
Want the full journal picture?
These pages attract evaluation intent more than upload-ready intent.