Featured articles are examples of our best work, selected by the featured article candidates process. Unfortunately, the featured article criteria are often misunderstood by contributors who aren't familiar with the process; as a result, many nominations fall short of the criteria.

Critera 1a, 1b, 1c, 2a, and 3 (listed below) are the Featured article criteria that cause the most problems in the FAC process. These FAC hotspots are discussed below, including explanations of what the criteria mean and what standards are expected of featured articles. This advice is based on experience of reading and reviewing candidate articles, and involvement in discussions on the criteria. It is intended to assist the writers of potential featured articles to avoid common mistakes, to avoid surprises, and to make the process as quick and painless as possible.

Spend some time looking through the other featured articles on related topics to get an idea of their basic quality, and the choices they have made in coverage and style. This should give you an idea of any major deficiencies in quality of the article you are looking to nominate. Keep in mind that featured article standards have been rising, so being better than a poorer quality FA or one that has degraded since nomination does not mean the article you are working on is a shoo-in or somehow deserves to be featured.

Some may consider the criteria and these standards overly strict, but Wikipedia is past the point where we need articles that just contain any information. We need high quality, accurate articles. If more articles already met the above criteria before being nominated, we could spend more time working on the final polishing and free up time to nominate and promote more articles. That makes this advice particularly important in the peer review process, so please point editors here for what their article needs before being nominated at WP:FAC.

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