Printing Prices are Increasing at KDP (reducing paperback royalties)

INCREASED PRINTING PRICES

On June 20, 2023, the cost of printing a book at KDP will increase, which will in turn lower the royalties for paperback (and hardcover) books.

  • If your book is taller than 9 inches high or wider than 6.12 inches wide, the effect is significant. It will cost about half a penny per page extra (plus about 15 cents on top of that). For example, if a book has 200 pages, you’re looking at $1.15 added to the printing cost, effectively reducing your royalty by $1.15.
  • If your book is 9 inches high or less and is also 6.12 inches wide or less, the effect is minimal (about 15 cents). The popular 6×9 size just gets a 15 surcharge.

Check out the pricing tables on the KDP help pages. They will also have a calculator coming that will compare new and old prices. In the meantime, if you pull up the pricing page for your book, it will show you both the current and future prices.

Find out what the new royalties will be for your books. You may want to consider adjusting the list prices, especially if the new royalty is zero or very small.

On your KDP Bookshelf, there is a link available to update all of your book prices at once to preserve your current royalty, but I recommend individually changing the prices.

If you plan to change your list price, I recommend doing it soon. For one, you will see an increased royalty for any copies printed before June 20, 2023. For another, you can get ahead of the rush. There may be lengthy delays as the deadline approaches.

We were perhaps fortunate that the prices didn’t increase sooner. I first published in 2008 (it was with CreateSpace then) and the list prices and royalties haven’t changed in the US since I first published (although there have been changes in other countries). That’s 15 years of steady royalties, in spite of inflation. This past year, inflation has been pretty significant globally, so it’s no surprise that the increased costs have finally reached KDP. These price increases could have conceivably been implemented last summer when inflation first turned sky-high.

The main difficulty I see is the new concept of a printing charge for “oversize” books. Imagine a 600 page 7×10 book now adding $3.15 more to the printing cost. That seems to be a pretty steep price change for oversized books with a high page count. (Or maybe it was just way too cheap in the first place?) But maybe larger books tend to be nonfiction technical or artistic books that can command higher prices (or journals; maybe KDP is partly doing this to discourage certain kinds of books from being made print-on-demand).

I don’t think it’s the size of the paper itself that is important. I think it’s the additional ink needed to print books with larger trim sizes. Perhaps they should measure how much ink is used and use that to determine the prices (though that would really kill the prices for some art books).

Another point to consider is that other publishers have also had to deal with rising inflation. So although KDP is just now raising their list prices, other authors’ and publishers are also dealing with inflationary pressures. It’s not like KDP’s prices are going up while the rest of the industry is holding steady. Everything is trending upward.

It is what it is, and unless you think you can fight it, we need to deal with it. Find out what your new royalty is and decide whether or not to raise your list price in part to help compensate. Raising the price may deter sales to some extent in some cases, but there is some degree of price elasticity where it may not make much difference, especially if the book is reasonably priced to begin with.

Good luck with your books,

Chris McMullen, author of the Improve Your Math Fluency series of workbooks

Kindle Unlimited Pages Read Rate for May, 2019

MAY, 2019 KINDLE UNLIMITED PER PAGE RATE

For May, 2019, the KENP per-page rate for pages read through Kindle Unlimited was $0.00466.

This is nearly identical to what it was in April, and is a small improvement over March.

In May, the KDP Select Global fund climbed up to $24.6 million.

The Global fund was $24.1 in April and $24.0 million in March.

Write Happy, Be Happy

Chris McMullen

Author of the Improve Your Math Fluency series of math workbooks and self-publishing guides

April 2019’s KENP per-page-read rate for Kindle Unlimited

KINDLE UNLIMITED: APRIL 2019’S PER-PAGE RATE

$0.004665 was the per-page rate for pages read through Kindle Unlimited in April of 2019.

This is an improvement over March’s rate of $0.00451.

$24.1 million was the KDP Select Global fund for April of 2019.

This was nearly identical to March’s figure of $24 million.

Write Happy, Be Happy

Chris McMullen

Author of the Improve Your Math Fluency series of math workbooks and self-publishing guides

Book Royalty Fantasy Fun

Fantasy

Prior to publishing, every author has the opportunity to entertain fantasies about book royalties.

Only a few authors get to experience the fantasy after publishing, yet every author can enjoy the dream beforehand.

Let’s have some fun with this.

If your wildest dreams could come true, would you:

  • Pay off your mortgage? Look for a new home?
  • Shop for a new car? Buy a yacht? Try on new jewelry?
  • Settle your student loan? Get out of debt?
  • Help out charity? Share with family or friends?
  • Start a new business? Play the stock market.
  • Blow all your cash before you realize how much you have to pay in taxes? Whoops!
  • Think of something creative you could do with mega royalties, like making a fancy gold-plated edition of your book.

This is the one occasion where every author should love math. It’s fun to play with the numbers in the months leading up to publication.

Dream about a bestseller.

  • Every time you check your sales reports, the numbers change, even though you just checked it a minute ago—heck, you just hit the refresh button repeatedly and the number of sales goes up. Cool, huh?
  • Imagine that you could sell 1 book every 10 seconds. That’s 6 books per minute, 360 books per hour, 8,640 books per day, 259,200 books per month, 3 million books if you can keep it up for a whole year. Now we’re properly in fantasy land.
  • At $2 per book (that’s 70% of a $2.99 e-book or a 20% royalty for a $9.95 paperback), you’d be making $12 per minute, $720 per hour, $17,280 per day, half a million dollars per month, and 6 million dollars per year.
  • Everybody will know your name, they will recognize you walking through the mall. Everyone will ask for your autograph. You’ll hire someone to handle all your interview requests. Isn’t life so grand?

Let’s be a little more modest:

  • 1000 books per day would be pretty awesome, right? At a modest $2 royalty, that would yield $2,000 per day or $60,000 per month. Not a bad month, eh?
  • 100 books per day is much more plausible; that’s just 4 sales per hour, one sale every 15 minutes. A $2 royalty would net $6,000 per month. Maybe your book is worth more. Suppose you set the price at $9.99 for an e-book and draw a royalty of $7. Sell 100 books a day and you earn $21,000 for the month. You could start shopping for that car…
  • 10 books per day seems like nothing, doesn’t it? That’s not even one sale every two hours. You’d have to earn a royalty of $3.33 in order to make $1000 per month.
  • 1 book per day is pretty modest, yet there are millions of books that don’t achieve this. You’d have to earn a royalty of $3.33 in order to make $100 per month.

A 99-cent e-book earning a 35-cent royalty requires many, many sales to make your dreams come true:

  • 1000 books per day is still pretty good: $350 isn’t bad for one day’s sales. You’d sell 30,000 books per month to earn $10,500.
  • 100 books per day works out to $1,050 per month.
  • 10 books per day comes to $105 per month.
  • 1 book per day can buy you two Happy Meals for the entire month. That’s about it.

While it’s fun to fantasize about being a bestseller, the reality is that most books sell fewer than one copy per day on average.

But you don’t have to sell loads of books to live the dream:

  • Just writing a book is a remarkable feat.
  • Becoming a published author—hurray!
  • Seeing your name in print—three cheers for you!
  • Your first sale to a stranger—way to go!
  • Got a favorable review—so cool!
  • Asked for your autograph—a Kodak moment!
  • Thanked by a stranger in the grocery store for writing your book—do I see tears?

Writing because it makes your life better and may make other people’s lives better… that’s priceless. 🙂

Publishing Resources

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Chris McMullen, Author of A Detailed Guide to Self-Publishing with Amazon and Other Online Booksellers

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