Related guide summary
Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) has democratized the book industry, allowing anyone to publish a digital or physical book globally. However, many authors focus entirely on writing and ignore the unit economics of self-publishing until they receive their first royalty check, which is often shockingly small.
KDP royalties are not a straightforward percentage of your list price. They are highly dependent on the format (ebook vs. paperback), file size, page count, color options, and the specific Amazon marketplace where the sale occurred.
Furthermore, the days of organic discovery on Amazon are largely over. To sell books at scale, you must run Amazon Ads. If you do not understand your exact net margin per book, you will blindly spend money on ads and bleed cash on every sale.
Ebook royalties and the delivery fee trap
For Kindle ebooks priced between $2.99 and $9.99, Amazon offers a 70% royalty option. If priced outside this window, the royalty drops to 35%. Most authors intuitively choose the 70% option.
However, the 70% royalty comes with a hidden cost: the Digital Delivery Fee. Amazon charges a few cents per megabyte based on your book's file size. If you publish a textbook or a children's book with high-resolution images, this delivery fee can consume a massive portion of your margin.
For image-heavy books, it is sometimes mathematically better to choose the 35% royalty option, which does not charge a delivery fee. You must run both scenarios in a calculator to find the optimal pricing strategy.
The unforgiving math of print-on-demand
For physical paperbacks and hardcovers, KDP offers a 60% royalty rate. But here is the critical catch: that 60% is calculated on the list price, and then the printing cost is deducted from your share.
The printing cost is fixed based on page count and ink type (black and white vs. premium color). If you publish a 300-page color workbook and price it at $15, your 60% share is $9. But if the color printing cost is $10, you are operating at a loss. Amazon will actually prevent you from setting a price that results in negative royalties.
To generate a $3 profit on a thick color book, you may be forced to price it at $25, which might price you out of the market. Understanding these printing constraints before you format and design your book is crucial.
Expanded Distribution vs Exclusive Margins
Amazon offers an 'Expanded Distribution' option for paperbacks, allowing bookstores and libraries to order your book. If a sale occurs through this channel, your royalty rate drops from 60% to 40%, and the printing cost is still deducted from your share.
Many authors check the Expanded Distribution box without doing the math, only to discover that their book earns $4 on Amazon but $0.15 through Expanded Distribution. If the margin is too thin, you must either raise the list price globally or opt out of the expanded network.
Your calculator should let you toggle between these distribution channels so you understand the exact payout variance depending on where the customer clicks buy.
Defending your margin against Amazon Ads
Once you know your net royalty (e.g., $4 per paperback), you know your maximum allowable Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC). If you run Amazon Sponsored Products ads, you cannot spend more than $4 to acquire a sale, or you lose money.
This is measured by ACOS (Advertising Cost of Sales). If your book is $15 and your profit is $4, your break-even ACOS is roughly 26%. Any ad campaign running higher than 26% is burning cash.
By modeling these numbers in advance, you can set strict bid limits on your ads. You transition from an author hoping for sales into a publisher running a disciplined direct-response business.
Example: a paperback priced too low to advertise
EXAMPLE: An author prices a paperback at $9.99 because competing books look similar. After print cost and marketplace deductions, the royalty is only $1.60. If Amazon Ads require $3.00 to acquire a sale, every advertised order loses money even though the book is selling.
The author has three practical choices: raise price, reduce page count or color cost, improve conversion so ad cost falls, or use ads only for visibility while relying on organic sales for profit. The calculator helps identify which lever has enough room to matter.
Common questions
Why does Amazon take so much of my book's price?
Amazon provides the global storefront, processes the payment, hosts the files, and physically prints and ships the book on demand. You are paying for a massive fulfillment infrastructure.
Should I always price my ebook at $2.99?
Not necessarily. While $2.99 is the floor for the 70% royalty, pricing at $4.99 or $9.99 can yield much higher profit per unit if your niche supports premium pricing (e.g., non-fiction or technical guides).
How do taxes affect international KDP royalties?
If you are a non-US author, the IRS requires Amazon to withhold up to 30% of your US royalties unless your country has a tax treaty. This withholding is taken out of your net profit, severely impacting your ROI.