My sweet, serious, passionate author and coaching client, Emma, thought she was done.
“LET’S PUBLISH!” she shouted, holding her manuscript like Rafiki held Simba. Her eyes sparkled. Her cheeks were flushed with triumph. She had wrestled with plot holes, slayed dangling modifiers, and even survived feedback from her brutally honest editor, Cheryl.
She was ready. Or so she thought.
That’s when I gently broke the news.
“Awesome! Now we’ll move on to formatting.”
She blinked. “What?”
“You know… interior formatting? That important step we outlined in our publishing process guide.”
“Like… italics?”
“Not exactly.”
I explained: formatting is the thing that transforms your Word doc—complete with its rogue fonts, mysterious spacing, and chaotic tab indents—into an actual, readable, professional-looking book. It’s the difference between an A4 printout and, well, a book.
“You mean,” she said slowly, “books don’t just become books when I upload them to Amazon?”
“No, Emma. No, they do not.”
Emma isn’t alone. So many first-time authors think the hard part ends when they type The End. But before your book struts onto Amazon or lands on someone’s nightstand, it needs a serious makeover.
Interior formatting is what takes your manuscript from college essay vibes to bookstore-worthy.
What Is Book Interior Formatting?
Interior formatting (sometimes called book layout design) is the process of arranging your manuscript’s text and visual elements into a professional, readable format for both print books and eBooks.
This includes:
- Choosing consistent fonts, spacing, and paragraph styles
- Correct margins, alignment, and page numbers
- Structuring chapter headings, subheadings, and scene breaks
- Designing for both Amazon KDP formatting and standard print sizes (like 6×9 or 5×8)
Whether you’re publishing on Kindle, IngramSpark, or doing print-on-demand, good formatting ensures your book looks clean, polished, and market-ready. Just like any other book on your local bookshelves, and NOT like a “special” budget job that screams unprofessional.
Why Interior Book Formatting Matters for Self-Publishers
Readers may forgive one typo. They won’t forgive a clunky layout.
A poor reading experience—whether it’s awkward line breaks, inconsistent fonts, or text that doesn’t reflow properly on e-readers—can lead to bad reviews, refund requests, or worse: readers quitting halfway through.
Here’s why book formatting matters:
- Professional presentation: Competes visually with traditionally published books
- Reader trust: Looks clean, credible, and worth their time
- Platform compliance: Avoids rejection or errors on sites like Amazon KDP or Apple Books
- Easier readability: Keeps readers immersed, not distracted
Think of formatting as putting your story in a tailored suit. It’s still your voice—but better dressed.
How to Format a Book for Print and Kindle
You have three main options when formatting your book for self-publishing:
- Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Tools
Programs like Vellum (Mac), Atticus, or Reedsy Book Editor allow authors to format their own interiors with templates.
- Pros: Lower cost, full control, good for simple layouts
- Cons: Learning curve, limited customization, not ideal for complex books
- Best for: Novels, memoirs, or straightforward nonfiction
- Book Formatting Software + Templates
Microsoft Word and Adobe InDesign can be used with pre-built templates.
- Pros: Budget-friendly
- Cons: Easy to mess up margins, headers, or pagination
- Best for: Authors comfortable with layout software
- Hire a Professional Book Formatter
If you want a seamless experience and bookstore-quality results, a book formatting service for self-publishers is often the best path.
- Pros: Professional quality, error-free, platform-ready files
- Cons: Higher cost, turnaround time
- Best for: First-time authors, complex layouts, or high-quality nonfiction
Tip: Always ask for both print PDF and eBook (KPF/EPUB + MOBI) files. Each requires a slightly different setup.
How Much Does Professional Book Formatting Cost?
| Type of Service | Price Range | Suitable For |
| DIY Tools (Vellum, Atticus) | $100–$250 (one-time license) | Authors formatting multiple books |
| Budget Freelancer (Fiverr, Reedsy) | $100–$300 | Simple interior layout |
| Mid-Tier Formatter (KDP/Print + eBook) | $300–$600 | Most indie authors |
| Premium Services (Design-heavy) | $600–$1200+ | Complex nonfiction, illustrated books |
How to Prepare Your Manuscript for Formatting
Before you send your manuscript to be formatted:
- Finalize your content – No edits should happen after this stage.
- Decide on your book trim size – 6×9” is standard for many paperbacks.
- Choose your style – Serif or sans-serif font? Chapter titles bold or simple?
- Include front/back matter – Dedication, acknowledgments, bio, and author website.
- Have your book back-cover blurb ready. We recommend anything from 150 – 250 words, depending on your book trim size.
- Have your ISBNs ready – If applicable, especially for print versions.
Interior Book Formatting Guidelines
| Element | Standard Guidelines |
| Font | Print: Serif fonts eg Garamond, Times New Roman, Georgia, Palatino Digital: Sans serif fonts eg Georgia, Arial, Verdana |
| Font Size | Body Text: 11–12 pt Nonfiction: 10–11 pt Children’s Books: 14 pt or larger Large Print: 16 pt or larger |
| Line Spacing | 1.2 to 1.5 line spacing for readability |
| Paragraph Indent | First-line indent: 0.3″ to 0.5″<br>- No extra spacing between paragraphs |
| Margins | Top/Bottom: 0.75″–1″ Outside: 0.25″–0.5″ Inside (Gutter): 0.375″–0.875″ (depending on page count) |
| Text Alignment | Justified alignment for main body text. Use hyphenation to prevent uneven spacing |
| Page Breaks | Insert hard page breaks at the end of chapters |
| Widows & Orphans | Adjust formatting to prevent single lines at the top or bottom of a page |
| Headers & Footers | |
| Chapter Start | Begin new chapters on a new page. Optional: start on the right-hand (odd-numbered) page |
| Special Pages | Front matter (e.g., acknowledgments, foreword) uses Roman numerals. Main content starts with Arabic numerals |
Avoid These Common Errors
- Mixed fonts or inconsistent sizes
- Inconsistent indentation
- Double spaces after periods
- Widows & orphans (single lines at top/bottom of a page)
- Lakes and rivers (particularly wide spaces in justified text, especially if those spaces pour down the page for multiple lines)
Pro Insight: Always preview your files in KDP’s Previewer Tool before publishing to catch layout issues.
A Well-Formatted Book Is a Readable Book
Your words matter—but so does how they’re delivered. Interior formatting isn’t just about aesthetics—it’s about giving your reader a seamless, distraction-free experience.
Don’t let poor formatting get in the way of your message. Whether you go DIY or hire a pro, make sure your book shows up looking its best—on every page and every device.
Need Help Formatting Your Book for Print and Kindle?
We offer affordable, professional book formatting services for self-publishers, tailored for Amazon KDP, IngramSpark, and beyond. Let’s get your manuscript ready to shine.
Read the previous instalment of the How to Publish Series (Step 3: How to Self-Edit) here.


