There are three things to look for when you are evaluating academic journals to find a journal to publish in.
Fit is deciding whether or not the journal is a good fit/match with your respective research.
Impact is assessing the journal impact, including citation-based impact factors, altmetrics, and the impact of OA journals.
Quality is considering how a journal relates to scholarly community standards, including evaluating practices used in predatory publishing
This section "Nuts and Bolts of Scholarly Publishing: Home" by UW Libraries was used under the license CC-BY-NC 4.0
Journal/Author Name Estimator (JANE) – PubMed
Jane compares your document (or keywords) to the PubMed database to find matching journals, authors or articles. Best for medical/health sciences disciplines.
Web of Science Manuscript Matcher
You will need to create a free account to access Match.
SpringerNature Journal Suggestor
The Journal Impact Factor is a measure of the frequency with which the average article in a journal has been cited in a particular year. The Journal Impact Factor is found in WoS InCites Journal Citation Reports. The Journal Impact Factor has sometimes been used inappropriately as a proxy for quality. It is used by the vendor Clarivate Analytics to measure the importance or rank of a journal by calculating the times its articles are cited.
The Eigenfactor Score measures the number of times articles from the journal published in the past five years have been cited in the Journal Citation Reports (JCR) year.
Like the Impact Factor, the Eigenfactor Score is essentially a ratio of number of citations to total number of articles. However, unlike the Impact Factor, the Eigenfactor Score:
Another alternative to JIF is Google Scholar Top Publications - this ranking displays a journal's h5-index.
The h-index is the largest number h such that at least h articles in that publication were each cited at least h times each in the last 5 years.
Altmetrics is an alternative metric of impact; alternative indicators include download counts, patent mentions, how many times an article has been bookmarked, blogged about or cited in Wikipedia etc. While Altmetrics are generally author or article-level measures, investigating Altmetrics of articles in a journal can tell you about the level of engagement that the journal receives from the public and the policy community. Some article records will display links to these metrics (often from Altmetric or Plum Analytics).
Peer review ensures quality and validity. Ideally, peer review can produce higher quality published scholarly works and it can improve your paper with feedback from experts
This section "Evaluating Journals: Quality (Peer Review)" by UW Libraries was used under the license CC-BY-NC 4.0
A small subset of open access journals with deceptive publishing practices, that charge large APC fees and fail to do rigorous peer review of their articles. This results in very low quality research. Predatory journals try to capitalize on the academic's pressure to "publish or perish".
This section "Evaluating Journals: Quality" by UW Libraries was used under the license CC-BY-NC 4.0