If your organization is eligible but not yet registered, an official representative can complete the free registration form on the Research4Life portal.
Institutions in these countries get access for free.
—or even the entire country—can lose access until the security breach is resolved.
The phrase “Hinari password 2024” is a common but misleading search. There is no single code; instead, access is a partnership between WHO, publishers, and your institution. By understanding whether you use , you can solve 99% of access problems.
Furthermore, recent free access for Ukrainian scientists to Research4Life in 2024 highlights the program's adaptability to global needs.
: Passwords are issued to the library or director of a registered institution. Individual researchers must obtain the current login details from their local institutional librarian.
: If the system detects concurrent logins from multiple unauthorized countries or IP addresses on a single institutional account, that entire university or hospital may have its access permanently revoked.
Hinari access is , not individual. This means that individual users (students, researchers, medical staff) cannot register for a personal account directly with Research4Life. Instead, their library or institution registers, and a generic username and password are provided to the institution to be shared with authorized users.
: It provides healthcare providers, researchers, and policymakers in underserved areas with the same data available in high-income nations.
: Countries with a Gross National Income (GNI) per capita below $1,600 or a Human Development Index (HDI) under 0.63 receive completely free access.
If your institution is not registered, you can still access thousands of journals for free without a password:
Access is primarily for non-profit institutions in developing countries.