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Guidance for ICLR 2026 Workshop Proposals 

 

ICLR Workshop Co-Chairs 

Andre Araujo (Google DeepMind
Adji Bousso Dieng (Princeton University)
Nezihe Merve Gürel (TU Delft)
Yanan Sui (Tsinghua University)

This is the eighth year that ICLR will have workshops. With the rapid growth and interest in ICLR and its associated workshops, the competition for workshops has grown. To guide and support submissions,  the workshop chairs have agreed on the following guidance for proposals to hold a workshop at ICLR 2026. Organizers of workshop proposals should take care to respect every piece of guidance provided here, and provide explicit answers to the questions implied throughout, as well as explicitly addressing the selection criteria listed below.

Timeline

  • Workshop Application Open: 8 September 2025
  • Workshop Application Deadline: 10 October 2025, 11.59pm AoE
  • Workshop Acceptance Notification: 1 December 2025
  • Suggested Submission Date for Workshop Contributions: 30 January 2026
  • Mandatory Accepted Paper Notification Date*: 1 March 2026, 11.59pm AoE
    *This is the deadline for informing authors who submitted to your workshop about your acceptance decisions, and for notifying us by making all accepted papers publicly available on OpenReview. This date is especially important for workshop contributors who will apply for financial assistance from ICLR.
  • Import Workshop Program and Accepted Papers to iclr.cc: 11 March 2026, 11.59pm AoE

The global author notification deadline of 1 March 2026 will not be extended.

Note that all proposal organizers are required to have an OpenReview profile. Please create an OpenReview Profile at least two weeks before the workshop application deadline on 10 October 2025.

Selection Criteria

  1. Degree to which the proposal is focused on an important and topical problem, and the degree to which it is expected that the community will find the workshop interesting, exciting, and valuable. 
  2. Intellectual excitement of the topic. Is it likely to break new ground, or reiterate past debates?
  3. Diversity and inclusion. (See expectations below under Other Guidance and Expectations for Workshop Proposals.)
  4. Degree to which the proposed program offers an opportunity for discussion.
  5. Degree to which the proposal creates opportunities for under-represented, under-resourced, and budding researchers to engage with the community. (See requirements below under Platform for Tiny or Short Papers.)
  6. Quality of proposed invited speakers (including expertise, scientific achievements, and presentation ability). Workshop organizers are required to confirm tentative interest from proposed invited speakers and mention this in their proposal.
  7. Degree to which the organizers have offered means to engage in the workshop for those unable to physically attend given that the workshops will be in-person.
  8. Organizational experience of the team.
  9. Other dimensions in the expectations listed below. 
  10. Points of difference. What makes this workshop enticingly different to the ICLR workshops held previously?

Assessment Process

The workshop chairs will appoint a number of reviewers who will provide written assessments of the proposals against the criteria listed above. Reviews will be released to authors. Their reports will be considered by the workshop chairs who will jointly decide upon the selected workshops (subject to the notes on COIs listed below). The final decisions will be made by the workshop chairs via consensus and judgment. 

Note that in contrast to the number of papers accepted at most conferences there is a natural limit to the number of workshops that can be accepted, dictated by the number of available rooms at the conference venue. 

Hard Constraints/Workshop Requirements

  1. Honor the Global Notification Deadline Prior until 1 March 2026 
    1. By submitting a workshop proposal, workshop organizers commit to notifying those who submit contributions (including talks and posters) to their workshop of their acceptance status before 11.59pm, 1 March 2026 (AOE). A timeline should be included in the proposal that will allow for this. 
  2. Platform Contributed Work
    1. Ensure that contributed work is well-featured in the program, and is given visibility through presentation slots and poster sessions. Additionally, your workshop program should effectively engage the audience by allowing for interactive components.
  3. Platform for Tiny or Short Papers
    1. We encourage each workshop to establish a tiny or short paper track to encourage the submission of late-breaking developments that would most benefit from feedback at ICLR, as well to make their workshops more accessible to potential authors outside the ML conference publication circuit.
    2. This tiny or short paper track should prioritize less-than-full-conference papers, welcoming submissions that, for example, present an implementation and evaluation of an unpublished but simple idea, a modest but self-contained theoretical result, a follow-up experiment or re-analysis of a previously published paper, or a fresh perspective on an existing publication.
    3. To assist workshop organizers with the OpenReview setup of this track in addition to others that the workshop may host, we will provide a venue configuration template that supports this feature.
    4. Because ICLR tiny and short papers are a participatory initiative, AI-generated papers are not allowed for these formats. AI assistance is permitted, but submissions must be primarily human-authored,
      reflecting original thought and analysis. See guidance from NYU and MIT on the distinction between AI-generated and AI-assisted work.
    5. See this page for a history of the ICLR tiny papers initiative.
  4. Participation Limits
    1. Each individual may be listed as an organizer in no more than two submitted workshop proposals.
    2. Each individual may be listed as a speaker in no more than two distinct workshop proposals.
    3. Each workshop proposal may include a maximum of eight organizers.
  5. Managing Chair and Reviewer Conflicts of Interest
    1. Workshop chairs cannot be organizers nor give invited talks at any workshop, but can submit papers and give contributed talks.
    2. Workshop reviewers cannot review any proposal on which they are listed as an organizer or invited speaker, and may not accept invitations to speak at any workshop they have reviewed after the workshop is accepted.
    3. Workshop chairs and reviewers cannot review or shape acceptance decisions about workshops with organizers from within their organization. (For large corporations, this means anyone in the corporation world-wide).
  6. Managing Organizer Conflicts of Interest
    1. Workshop organizers cannot give talks at the workshops they organize. They can give a brief introduction to the workshop and/or act as a panel moderator.
    2. Workshop organizers should state in their proposal how they will manage conflicts of interest in assessing submitted contributions. At a minimum, an organizer should not be involved in the assessment of a submission from someone within the same organization. 
  7. Plan Well for In-Person
    1. Workshop organizers should strictly aim for hosting an in-person event. However, we strongly encourage the organizers to account for exceptional circumstances, such as visa issues or other constraints.
  8. LLM usage policy
    1. Workshop organizers are recommended to follow the Policies on Large Language Model Usage at ICLR 2026. (https://blog.iclr.cc/2025/08/26/policies-on-large-language-model-usage-at-iclr-2026/)
    2. For workshops open to AI serving as primary authors and/or reviewers of workshop papers, please detail the role of AI in the workshop proposal. We suggest to detail: (i) the AI systems permitted to be used by workshop participants and/or used by workshop organizers; (ii) the nature of the AI’s contribution (e.g., authoring, reviewing, discussion moderation); and (iii) what human
      oversight or validation of the AI’s work is expected from workshop participants and/or committed to by workshop organizers.
    3. AI-generated papers are not allowed for tiny nor short paper tracks; see (3) for more details.

Failure to comply with these requirements may result in early rejection of the proposal or, if already accepted, cancellation of the workshop. Final decisions rest at the discretion of the ICLR 2026 Workshop Chairs.

Other Guidance and Expectations for Workshop Proposals 

  1. We encourage, and expect, diversity in the organizing team and speakers. This includes diversity of viewpoint and thinking regarding the topics discussed at the workshop, gender, ethnicity, affiliations, seniority, geographic location, etc. If a workshop is part of a series, the organizer list should include people who have not organized in the past. Organizers should articulate how they have addressed diversity in their proposal in each of these senses. While we discourage organizers from submitting multiple proposals, ultimately it is at the chairs' discretion to consider it in their accept/reject decisions.
  2. Since the goal of the workshop is to generate discussion, sufficient time and structure needs to be included in the program for this. Proposals should explicitly articulate how they will encourage broad discussion. 
  3. Workshop proposals should list explicitly what the problems are they would like to see solved, or at least advances made, as part of their workshop. They should explain why these are important problems and how the holding of their proposed workshop will contribute to their solution.
  4. Workshops should not primarily be a venue for work that has been previously published in other conferences on machine learning, including the ICLR main track. Organizers should make this clear in their calls and explain in their proposal how they will encourage the presentation of ongoing or novel machine learning work.
  5. We encourage workshop submissions of varying lengths and scopes, in particular as an avenue for junior and new researchers to start participating in the ICLR community. Organizers should articulate what they hope to achieve from the format proposal beyond the talks listed. 
  6. With the extraordinary growth of ICLR, and noting the impossibility of accurately predicting attendance and time zone differences, organizers should explain how they will provide access to the content of the workshop for those who cannot attend in person. This might include recording of talks, publishing short working papers or posters on the web, having a follow-up special issue of a journal, curating and maintaining a web page with a range of content, or other ideas.
  7. Workshops should allow for choice of attendance based on content. Good workshops will put talk titles up publicly prior to site publication and note the archival status of their submissions. Organizers should articulate how they will do this.
  8. Organizing a workshop is a complex task, and proposals should outline the organizational experience and skills of the proposed organizers (as a team). We encourage junior researchers to be involved in workshop organization, but prefer some collective experience in organizing a complex event.

Minimum Information Requirements

  • Workshop summary
  • Tentative schedule
  • Invited speakers/Panelists
  • Organizers and biographies
  • ​​Anticipated audience size
  • Plan to get an audience for a workshop (advertising, reaching out, etc.)
  • Diversity commitment
  • Virtual access to workshop materials and outcome 
  • Previous related workshops

Example Successful Proposals

Successful proposals of the past year can be found here: https://openreview.net/group?id=ICLR.cc/2025/Workshop_Proposals#tab-accept

Frequently Asked Questions From Past Workshops

  1. Workshop Series
    We neither encourage nor discourage workshops on topics that have appeared before. Membership of an existing sequence of workshops is irrelevant in the assessment of a workshop proposal (it neither helps or hinders). Workshop proposals will be evaluated solely on their merits for this year’s conference. Please indicate if your workshop is part of an ongoing series (ICLR or other conferences).
  2. Overlapping Proposals
    We will not forcibly merge proposals.  If multiple strong proposals are submitted on similar topics, we will choose a single proposal to accept. We may then choose to reach out to the organizers of the rejected proposals to ask whether they would like us to share their proposals with the organizers of the accepted workshop. The organizers of the accepted workshop may then optionally initiate a merge. 
  3. Workshop Modality

This year, ICLR will host only in-person workshops. While all arrangements should be focused on the in-person format, organizers should be ready to accommodate situations where an author or speaker is unable to attend due to exceptional circumstances. For example, organizers could display posters on behalf of authors who cannot be present, or allow them to publicize their work through pre-recorded videos on the workshop website.