Journal Guides5 min readUpdated Apr 28, 2026

Trends in Plant Science Submission Guide

Science's submission process, first-decision timing, and the editorial checks that matter before peer review begins.

Senior Researcher, Molecular & Cell Biology

Author context

Specializes in molecular and cell biology manuscript preparation, with experience targeting Molecular Cell, Nature Cell Biology, EMBO Journal, and eLife.

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Submission at a glance

Key numbers before you submit to Science

Acceptance rate, editorial speed, and cost context — the metrics that shape whether and how you submit.

Full journal profile
Impact factor45.8Clarivate JCR
Acceptance rate<7%Overall selectivity
Time to decision~14 days to first decisionFirst decision

What acceptance rate actually means here

  • Science accepts roughly <7% of submissions — but desk rejection runs higher.
  • Scope misfit and framing problems drive most early rejections, not weak methodology.
  • Papers that reach peer review face a different bar: novelty, rigor, and fit with the journal's editorial identity.

What to check before you upload

  • Scope fit — does your paper address the exact problem this journal publishes on?
  • Desk decisions are fast; scope problems surface within days.
  • Cover letter framing — editors use it to judge fit before reading the manuscript.
Submission map

How to approach Science

Use the submission guide like a working checklist. The goal is to make fit, package completeness, and cover-letter framing obvious before you open the portal.

Stage
What to check
1. Scope
Presubmission inquiry (optional)
2. Package
Full submission
3. Cover letter
Editorial triage
4. Final check
Peer review

Quick answer: This Trends in Plant Science submission guide is for plant scientists evaluating their proposed Review against TIPS's Trends-style synthesis bar. The journal primarily commissions Reviews; unsolicited proposals enter as presubmission inquiries. The editorial standard requires a synthesis argument with broad plant-science relevance.

If you're targeting TIPS, the main risk is comprehensive-survey framing, topic timing collisions, or author authority gaps.

From our manuscript review practice

Of presubmission inquiries we've reviewed for Trends in Plant Science, the most consistent decline trigger is comprehensive-survey framing without a synthesis argument.

How this page was created

This page was researched from TIPS's author guidelines, Cell Press editorial-policy materials, Clarivate JCR data, and Manusights internal analysis of presubmission inquiries.

TIPS Journal Metrics

Metric
Value
Impact Factor (2024 JCR)
17.0
5-Year Impact Factor
~19+
CiteScore
30.0
Functional Acceptance Rate (post-invitation)
High
Presubmission-Inquiry Approval Rate
~10-15%
Time from invitation to publication
6-12 months
Publisher
Cell Press / Elsevier

Source: Clarivate JCR 2024, Cell Press editorial disclosures (accessed April 2026).

TIPS Submission Process and Timeline

Stage
Details
Presubmission inquiry
Required for unsolicited Review proposals
Inquiry portal
Cell Press submission portal
Inquiry length
1-2 page outline
Inquiry decision
2-4 weeks
Manuscript invitation
Following inquiry approval
Manuscript delivery
4-8 months
Review article length
3,000-5,000 words, 50-100 references

Source: TIPS author guidelines.

Submission snapshot

What to pressure-test
What should already be true before contact
Synthesis argument
Proposed Review offers an organizing framework
Author authority
Sustained primary-research record in plant science
Topic timing
No comparable TIPS Review in the prior 3-5 years
Plant-science relevance
Direct plant-science contribution
Inquiry letter
Establishes synthesis argument and authority

What this page is for

Use this page when deciding:

  • whether the proposed Review has a synthesis argument
  • whether the author team has plant-science authority
  • whether topic timing is right

What should already be in the inquiry

  • a clear synthesis argument
  • author authority with primary-research evidence
  • topic-timing case
  • plant-science contribution
  • a 1-2 page outline

Inquiry mistakes that trigger early decline

  • Comprehensive-survey framing without synthesis argument.
  • Topic recently covered in TIPS.
  • Author standing in adjacent rather than central plant science.
  • Plant-science relevance is peripheral.

What makes TIPS a distinct target

TIPS is among the highest-impact plant-science Review journals.

Trends-style standard: the journal differentiates from Annual Review of Plant Biology (Annual format) and Nature Plants (high-impact original) by demanding Trends-style forward-looking synthesis.

Authority expectation: editors weigh sustained primary-research records.

Long planning horizon: invitations often planned 12-18 months ahead.

What a strong inquiry letter sounds like

The strongest TIPS inquiry letters establish:

  • the synthesis argument
  • the author authority
  • the topic-timing case
  • the plant-science relevance

Diagnosing pre-inquiry problems

Problem
Fix
Topic recently covered
Find a clearly distinct angle
Author authority is thin
Recruit a senior co-author with plant-science depth
Synthesis argument is weak
Articulate the organizing framework before contacting

How TIPS compares against nearby alternatives

Method note: the comparison reflects published author guidelines and Manusights internal analysis. We have not personally been TIPS authors; the boundary is publicly documented editorial behavior. Pros and cons are based on documented editorial scope.

Factor
Trends in Plant Science
Annual Review of Plant Biology
Nature Plants
The Plant Cell
Best fit (pros)
Trends-style plant science synthesis
Comprehensive Annual Review
High-impact original research
Mechanistic plant cell biology
Think twice if (cons)
Topic is comprehensive
Topic is Trends-style
Topic is Review
Topic is broader plant science

Submit (inquire) If

  • the synthesis argument is clear
  • the author team has primary-research record
  • the topic-timing case is strong
  • plant-science relevance is direct

Think Twice If

  • the topic was recently covered in TIPS
  • the author standing is in adjacent plant science
  • the scope is comprehensive rather than synthesis

In our pre-submission review work with Review proposals targeting TIPS, three patterns generate the most consistent inquiry declines.

In our experience, roughly 35% of TIPS declines trace to comprehensive-survey framing. In our experience, roughly 25% involve topic-timing collision. In our experience, roughly 20% arise from author-authority gaps.

  • Comprehensive-survey framing without synthesis argument. TIPS editors look for organizing argument. We observe inquiries framed as "comprehensive review of [topic]" routinely declined.
  • Topic-timing collision with recent TIPS coverage. TIPS editors check the journal's recent issues. We see inquiries on topics covered within 3-5 years routinely declined.
  • Author standing in adjacent rather than central plant science. TIPS editors weigh authority heavily. We find inquiries without plant-science primary-research credentials routinely declined. A TIPS presubmission readiness check can identify whether the inquiry case is strong.

Clarivate JCR 2024 bibliometric data places TIPS among top plant-science Review journals.

What we look for during pre-inquiry diagnostics

In pre-inquiry diagnostic work for top Trends-style plant-science journals, we consistently see four signals that distinguish strong proposals from weak ones. First, the proposed topic must align with TIPS editors' priority directions. Second, the author CV should show primary-research papers in the exact subfield. Third, the proposal should differentiate from Reviews published in TIPS in the prior 5 years. Fourth, the proposal should be framed around a synthesis argument.

How synthesis arguments differ from comprehensive surveys

The single most consistent feedback class we deliver is the synthesis-versus-survey distinction. A comprehensive survey catalogs recent papers. A synthesis offers an organizing framework, a contrarian argument, or a methodological consolidation. We coach proposers to articulate their organizing argument in one sentence before contacting.

Common pre-inquiry diagnostic patterns we encounter

Beyond the rubric checks, three pre-inquiry diagnostic patterns recur most often. First, contact letters that begin with topic-context paragraphs rather than the synthesis argument lose force. Second, contacts where the author authority section uses generic language are flagged. Third, contacts that lack engagement with TIPS's recent issues are at risk.

What separates strong from weak submissions at this tier

The strongest proposals we coach distinguish themselves on three operational behaviors. First, they confine the inquiry letter to one page. Second, they include a one-sentence elevator pitch. Third, they identify the specific recent TIPS articles that this proposal builds on.

How editorial triage shapes submission strategy

Editorial triage at TIPS operates on limited time per inquiry. Editors typically scan the synthesis argument, author authority, and topic-timing case before deciding whether to invite a full proposal. We coach researchers to design the inquiry letter for fast assessment.

Author authority and editorial-conversation positioning

Beyond methodology and contribution, TIPS weights author-team authority within the plant-science subfield. Strong submissions reference TIPS's recent papers explicitly. We coach researchers to identify 3-5 recent TIPS papers building on.

Reviewer expectations vs editorial expectations

A useful diagnostic distinction is between editor expectations and reviewer expectations. Editors triage on fit and apparent rigor; reviewers evaluate technical depth. The strongest manuscripts pass both filters.

Why specific subfield positioning matters at this tier

Beyond methodology and contribution, journals at this tier increasingly reward submissions that explicitly position the work within a specific subfield conversation. The strongest proposals identify the specific subfield disagreement or gap the work addresses.

Common pre-submission diagnostic patterns we observe at this tier

Beyond the rubric checks, three pre-submission diagnostic patterns recur most often. First, manuscripts where the abstract leads with context rather than the central synthesis argument lose force. Second, manuscripts where methodology lacks subfield positioning are flagged. Third, manuscripts that lack engagement with the journal's recent issues are at risk.

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Final pre-submission checklist

Manuscripts checking these five items consistently clear the editorial screen at higher rates: (1) clear synthesis argument, (2) author authority in plant science, (3) topic-timing case, (4) plant-science relevance, (5) discussion of forward-looking implications.

Frequently asked questions

TIPS primarily commissions Reviews from invited authors. Unsolicited proposals are accepted as presubmission inquiries. The journal accepts Reviews, Opinion, and Forum articles.

TIPS' 2024 impact factor is around 17.0. Functional acceptance rate at the presubmission-inquiry stage runs ~10-15%; once invited, completion-and-publication rates are high.

Trends-style Reviews on plant science: plant biology, plant biochemistry, plant ecology, plant biotechnology, and emerging plant-science topics.

Most reasons: comprehensive-survey framing, topic timing collisions, author authority gaps, or scope mismatch.

References

Sources

  1. TIPS author guidelines
  2. TIPS homepage
  3. Cell Press editorial policies
  4. Clarivate JCR 2024: TIPS

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