The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), the world's largest professional society dedicated to computing, has completed its long-planned shift to a fully open access publishing model. Effective January 1, 2026, every article, conference proceeding, magazine piece, and related artifact published by ACM appears immediately and freely available to readers worldwide through the ACM Digital Library.
Background on ACM and the Move Toward Open Access
Founded in 1947, ACM serves more than 100,000 members and publishes a wide array of journals, conference proceedings, and magazines that shape the field of computer science and information technology. For decades, access to these materials relied on institutional subscriptions or individual paywalls. Beginning several years ago, ACM initiated a phased transition, listening to feedback from authors, librarians, special interest groups, and research institutions around the globe. The goal was to remove financial barriers while preserving a sustainable revenue model for high-quality peer review, editing, and dissemination.
The completed transition marks ACM as the first major publisher in computer science to adopt 100 percent open access across its entire portfolio. All content now carries Creative Commons licenses, typically CC-BY or CC-BY-NC-ND, allowing broad reuse while authors retain copyright. This change aligns with broader global trends in scholarly communication that prioritize immediate availability and reusability of research outputs.
Details of the New Publishing Model
Under the new framework, the ACM Digital Library operates on a pay-to-publish rather than pay-to-read basis. Institutions can participate through ACM Open agreements, which cover article processing charges for affiliated corresponding authors. More than 2,700 institutions worldwide have already joined these agreements, enabling their researchers to publish without incurring personal fees.
Authors whose institutions are not yet part of ACM Open may pay article processing charges. Typical APCs range from approximately $700 to $1,800 depending on the venue and membership status, with lower rates for active ACM or SIG members. For the 2026 transition year, ACM approved a temporary subsidy that reduces these charges by roughly 65 percent, providing $250 off for members and $350 off for non-members. Need-based waivers remain available on a case-by-case basis, and automatic country-based discounts apply for authors in certain lower-income regions.
Conference proceedings, including those from ACM-sponsored events and the International Conference Proceedings Series, follow the same rules. Journals and magazines have also flipped to full open access, ensuring consistency across all ACM outputs.
Impacts on Researchers and Institutions
Early indications suggest the change is increasing visibility. Open access articles historically receive two to three times more downloads and up to 70 percent more citations than paywalled equivalents. Researchers in regions with limited library budgets now gain equal footing when accessing the latest findings in algorithms, human-computer interaction, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and other core areas.
University libraries report streamlined workflows. Instead of managing complex subscription bundles, many now allocate funds toward ACM Open participation, which often costs less than previous read-only access while supporting unlimited publishing for their faculty and students. Smaller colleges and institutions in emerging research economies particularly benefit from the expanded reach.
Individual authors without institutional support face new decisions. The temporary subsidy eases the shift, but long-term planning requires institutions to evaluate participation in ACM Open or budget for APCs. Many departments are incorporating these costs into grant proposals and research budgets as standard practice.
Stakeholder Perspectives
ACM President Yannis Ioannidis described the milestone as monumental for the global computing community. Editorial boards and special interest group leaders note that the transition followed extensive consultation, resulting in a model designed to minimize disruption. Librarians highlight improved equity in access, while early-career researchers appreciate the removal of paywalls that previously limited their ability to build on prior work.
Some authors express concern about APC affordability in fields where grant funding is modest. ACM has responded by expanding outreach to institutions and offering guidance on waiver processes. The phased approach over several years allowed time for feedback and adjustments, contributing to broad acceptance.
Broader Implications for Scholarly Publishing
ACM's move sets a precedent in computer science and may influence other professional societies. The shift from subscription to open access revenue streams requires careful financial modeling, yet ACM reports strong performance in recent Journal Citation Reports, with over 83 percent of its journals maintaining or increasing impact factors and multiple titles ranking in the top decile of their categories.
Globally, funders and governments increasingly mandate open access for publicly supported research. ACM's model demonstrates one viable path that balances author choice, institutional support, and publisher sustainability. Related initiatives, such as those from other computing organizations, may accelerate similar transitions elsewhere.
Photo by Markus Winkler on Unsplash
Future Outlook and Ongoing Developments
ACM continues to refine the model. Goals include raising the percentage of articles covered by ACM Open agreements to 80-85 percent within three years by engaging additional institutions. The Digital Library now offers Premium and Basic access tiers for enhanced features while keeping core content freely readable.
Researchers are encouraged to check institutional eligibility through the ACM Open portal and to discuss participation with library administrators. Grant writers should include open access fees in budgets, and conference organizers are updating submission guidelines to reflect the new requirements.
Longer term, the increased availability of ACM content is expected to accelerate innovation, collaboration across borders, and public engagement with computing research. Metrics on downloads, citations, and reuse will provide ongoing data to assess success.
Practical Guidance for Authors and Institutions
Corresponding authors should verify ACM Open status for their institution before submission. If covered, publication proceeds at no direct cost. Otherwise, options include paying the subsidized APC, requesting a waiver, or exploring co-authorship with colleagues at participating institutions.
Institutions considering ACM Open can review pricing tiers based on historical publishing volume. Many find the model cost-effective compared with prior subscriptions. ACM provides tools and case studies to support these decisions.
Readers worldwide can now explore the full ACM Digital Library without barriers, searching across decades of foundational and cutting-edge work in computing.
