Introduction
So you have a book idea burning in your mind, maybe even a finished draft sitting in a folder, and you’re wondering what to do next. You’ve heard that self-publishing is possible, maybe even lucrative, but the process looks complicated from the outside. Where do you even begin?
Here’s the thing: learning how to self-publish a book is not as overwhelming as it first appears. Millions of authors have done it. Over 1.7 million self-published books hit the market every year, and the authors behind them are regular people, not publishing insiders with industry connections. They just followed a clear process and took it one step at a time.
This guide covers every stage of that process, from writing your manuscript to editing, formatting, cover design, getting your ISBN, uploading to the right platforms, and marketing your book to real readers. By the time you finish reading, you’ll know exactly how to self-publish a book in 2026, and you’ll have everything you need to get started.
What Is Self-Publishing and Is It Right for You?
Self-publishing simply means you take on the role of publisher yourself, rather than handing your manuscript over to a traditional publishing house and giving up your rights, ownership, and creative control, you stay in charge of every decision: from the cover design and pricing to the release date and marketing strategy. Nothing is changed without your approval, and your vision for your book remains fully intact.
Until a decade ago, traditional publishing was the only real path to getting a book in front of readers. You needed to find a literary agent which took months, then submit your manuscript to different publishers to get it accepted with no guarantees of infringement or the work being copied, then 18 to 24 months of waiting before your book ever reached shelves. And even then, your royalty rate hovered around 10 to 15 percent of sales on the higher end.
Self-publishing flips that model entirely. You can earn 60 to 70 percent royalties on your digital sales (ebook/audiobook) and up to 60 percent or more on print versions through Amazon KDP. You can go from finished manuscript to published book in a matter of weeks. And you keep full creative control over every element of your work.
Self-publishing is the right path for authors who want speed, higher income potential, and the freedom to write what they want. If you don’t know how to create your cover, format your files, or set up your publishing, you can always get professional support at every stage of the process, professional self-publishing services and let the professionals handle the technical and production side while you focus on writing.
How to Self-Publish a Book: The Complete Step-by-Step Process
There are ten clear stages between having an idea and holding a published book. Authors who skip or rush through these steps are often the ones who end up with poor reviews and wonder why their book isn’t selling. In contrast, those who move through each stage with care create books that can stand alongside those from traditional publishing houses.
Let’s walk through each step.
Step 1: Write and Finish Your Manuscript
This sounds obvious, but finishing the manuscript is often the most challenging stage for first-time authors. Many aspiring writers spend months or even years revisiting the same draft, repeatedly refining the opening chapters instead of progressing toward a complete first version.
The most effective approach is to separate writing from editing. During the first draft, the goal is simple: focus on getting words on the page without self-editing. Writing consistently, around 500 to 1,000 words per day can help you complete a full manuscript within two to four months. At this stage, consistency is far more important than perfection or speed.
Before beginning the draft, it often helps to create a clear outline. In nonfiction, this usually means structuring each chapter around a specific problem the reader wants solved, with content designed to offer practical guidance or solutions. In fiction, many writers map out key plot points, the central conflict, and the resolution before developing individual scenes, which can provide direction and narrative consistency. Rather than limiting creativity, an outline is often used as a flexible guide that helps maintain momentum and prevents the writing process from stalling midway.
Once your first draft is complete, it’s best to step away from it for a few days. Returning with fresh eyes makes it much easier to spot issues you may have missed earlier. During self-editing, focus on key elements such as pacing, clarity, consistency, and any sections that feel repetitive or unclear.
Popular writing tools include Scrivener for its organization features, Google Docs for simplicity and cloud backup, and Microsoft Word for authors who prefer a traditional word processor.
Before you even begin writing, it’s also important to understand your genre and target reader. Look at comparable books in your category, what are they priced at, how are their covers designed, and who is buying them? Writing with the market in mind doesn’t limit creativity, it helps position your book so the right readers can actually discover and connect with it.
Step 2: Edit Your Book Professionally
Here’s an uncomfortable truth: no matter how strong a writer you are, your manuscript still needs professional editing before it’s ready to publish. This is the step that often separates books readers trust from those that struggle to gain traction or receive critical reviews.
There are three main levels of editing, and understanding them helps you identify exactly what your manuscript needs.
Developmental editing focuses on the big picture, structure, pacing, character development, argument flow in nonfiction, and whether the book works as a whole. Line editing refines sentence-level writing, improving clarity, tone, and word choice. Copyediting and proofreading catch grammar, punctuation, spelling errors, and inconsistencies.
Most first-time authors benefit from at least developmental editing and proofreading. If your writing is already strong at a sentence level, you may not need extensive line editing—but proofreading should never be skipped.
Before sending your manuscript for professional editing, it’s also valuable to gather feedback from beta readers. These are early readers in your genre who can highlight what’s working and what may need improvement before you invest in professional services. Writing communities on Reddit, Facebook groups, and platforms like Goodreads are common places to find them.
The cost of professional editing varies, but many authors who publish consistently invest anywhere between $250 and $1,999 per book. Rather than being an expense, it’s better viewed as an investment in reader trust, stronger reviews, and long-term sales performance.
The World Publishing Company offers professional book editing across every stage, including developmental, line, and copy editing, as well as dedicated book proofreading services to polish your final manuscript before it goes live. If you’re ready to take that step, professional editing can make the difference between a manuscript that feels unfinished and a book that reads confidently from start to finish, helping your work stand out and connect more deeply with the readers it was written for.
Step 3: Choose Your Book Title and Subtitle
Your book title is one of the most important marketing decisions you will make, yet it is often underestimated by first-time authors.
A strong title does three key things: it is clear, memorable, and immediately relevant to your target reader. It should also feel aligned with your genre. A thriller title typically carries tension and intrigue, a self-help title is more direct and benefit-driven, and a romance title often leans into emotion and connection. If your title could easily belong to any genre, it likely isn’t specific or compelling enough to stand out.
For nonfiction books, the subtitle plays an especially important role. A well-crafted subtitle clarifies who the book is for and what outcome or transformation the reader can expect. It also provides a natural opportunity to include relevant keywords, helping your book improve visibility in search results on platforms like Amazon and Google.
Many authors make the mistake of finalizing their title too early in the writing process. In reality, it’s often better to refine it later, once the manuscript is complete and the core message of the book is fully clear. At that stage, the title tends to emerge more naturally and usually becomes more accurate, impactful, and market-ready.
Step 4: Design a Professional Book Cover
Readers absolutely judge a book by its cover, and in online marketplaces, that judgment often happens in under two seconds. Before a potential reader reads a single line of your description, they have already decided whether your book feels worth clicking on.
A professional book cover serves two essential purposes: it signals quality and instantly communicates genre. Every genre has established visual conventions that readers subconsciously recognize. Romance covers often use soft palettes and emotional imagery, business books tend to favor clean, structured layouts, memoirs lean into personal and intimate design elements, and thrillers typically use bold, high-contrast visuals. When your cover aligns with these expectations, readers immediately understand where your book belongs and whether it is for them.
DIY covers, even when created with care, can unintentionally reduce sales. The issue is rarely effort; it is execution. Professional cover designers understand typography hierarchy, thumbnail readability, and genre-specific design psychology details that directly influence whether a browsing reader becomes a buyer.
As a general guideline, authors typically invest between $300 and $600 in a professional cover design. When working with a designer, it helps to come prepared with a few comparable titles you want to be inspired by, a clear understanding of your genre and target reader, and a simple description of the mood or feeling you want your cover to communicate.
A well-designed cover is not just decoration, it is one of the most important marketing tools your book has and The World Publishing Company has a team of experienced book cover designers who work within your genre conventions and deliver covers built to sell.
Step 5: Format Your Book for Print and Digital
Book formatting is one of the most underestimated stages in the publishing process until readers open a poorly formatted book on their device. Weak formatting disrupts the reading experience, signals a lack of professionalism, and can lead to negative reviews even when the content itself is strong.
Ebook formatting and print formatting are also two distinct processes, and both are required if you plan to publish across multiple formats.
Ebooks use what is known as reflowable text, meaning the layout automatically adjusts to different screen sizes and devices. A fixed-format file such as a PDF can appear broken or awkward on phones and e-readers. The industry-standard format for ebooks is EPUB, which ensures proper reflowing and is supported by all major publishing platforms.
Print formatting, on the other hand, is more structured and precise. It involves setting margins, selecting a trim size (with 6×9 inches being the most common for trade paperbacks), choosing readable interior fonts, and properly formatting elements such as chapter breaks, headers, and page numbers.
Several tools can make this process more manageable. Vellum is a popular choice among Mac users for its simplicity and professional output. Atticus offers a cross-platform solution with strong formatting features for both print and ebooks. The free Reedsy Book Editor is a good browser-based option, while Adobe InDesign is used for more advanced, professional-level design work.
If the technical side of formatting feels overwhelming, professional book formatting services can handle the entire process for you, delivering fully compliant, print-ready and ebook-ready files that meet the specifications of all major publishing platforms.
Step 6: Get Your ISBN
An ISBN (International Standard Book Number) is a unique identifier used by libraries, bookstores, and online retail platforms to catalog and track your book. Each format of your book whether it’s ebook, paperback, or hardcover requires its own separate ISBN.
There are two main ways to obtain an ISBN:
The first option is to use the free ISBN provided by Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing when you upload your book. This is a practical choice for most first-time authors, as it removes upfront cost and simplifies the publishing process. The main trade-off is that Amazon is listed as the publisher of record in industry databases, which may limit visibility and flexibility if you later pursue broader distribution or marketing.
The second option is to purchase your own ISBN through Bowker, the official ISBN agency in the United States. A single ISBN typically costs around $125, with discounted bundles available for multiple purchases. Owning your ISBN gives you full control over your publisher identity and allows you to publish and distribute across any platform without being tied to a specific retailer.
For most first-time authors focused primarily on Amazon, the free KDP ISBN is a strong and practical starting point. However, if you are aiming for wider bookstore distribution, long-term publishing independence, or building a recognizable author brand, investing in your own ISBN and purchasing through Bowker is worth the investment.
It’s also worth noting that many publishing companies including The World Publishing Company offer complete publishing packages that include ISBNs, editing, formatting, and cover design together. In many cases, these bundled services work out significantly more cost-effective, sometimes nearly twice as affordable than sourcing each service individually, while also ensuring consistency and professional quality across every stage of your book.
Step 7: Choose the Right Self-Publishing Platform
Where you publish determines how many readers can find your book, what royalties you earn, and how much control you have over your distribution. Most successful self-published authors don’t choose just one platform: they use a combination.
Here are the main platforms to know.
Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) is the starting point for almost every self-published author. Amazon controls roughly 50 percent of the US print book market and over 75 percent of the ebook market, so being on KDP means being where most readers are already shopping.
Barnes & Noble also plays a major role in the U.S. book market, particularly through its online store and nationwide retail network. Getting your book distributed through Barnes & Noble or similar expanded distribution channels helps increase credibility and makes your book accessible to one of the largest bookstore audiences in the country.
IngramSpark is the platform that gets your book into bookstores, libraries, and retailers beyond Amazon. If you want your book available through Barnes and Noble, independent bookshops, or school libraries, IngramSpark is how you get there. Most serious indie authors use both KDP and IngramSpark together: KDP for Amazon dominance, IngramSpark for wide distribution.
Draft2Digital is an aggregator that distributes your ebook to multiple stores at once, including Apple Books, Kobo, Barnes and Noble Press, and others. It’s a time-saving option if you want broad ebook reach without managing each platform individually.
KDP Select is an optional Amazon program that gives your ebook extra visibility through Kindle Unlimited and promotional tools like Kindle Countdown Deals and Free Book Promotions. The trade-off is exclusivity: while enrolled in KDP Select, your ebook can only be available on Amazon. It’s worth considering for authors whose readers are heavily Kindle-based.
For a full guide to getting your book live on the world’s largest retail platform, the World Publishing Company’s Amazon book publishing service handles everything from manuscript preparation to making it available on the world’s largest platform for books.
Step 8: Set Up Your Book Metadata
Metadata is the foundation of your book’s discoverability. It acts as your book’s digital identity across Amazon and other publishing platforms, influencing how your book ranks in search results, which categories it appears in, and which readers recommend your title. Well-optimised metadata can be the difference between a book that remains invisible and one that consistently attracts organic traffic and readers.
Your core Amazon KDP metadata elements include your book title, subtitle, book description, categories, and backend keywords. Each plays a direct role in improving your Amazon SEO and overall visibility.
Your book description is one of the most powerful yet underutilised marketing tools. It should function like a high-converting sales page. Start with a strong hook that captures attention immediately, clearly establish the story premise or value proposition, build emotional tension or curiosity, and end with a compelling call to action. Studying bestselling book descriptions in your genre is essential to understand effective structure, tone, and keyword usage.
Your Amazon categories determine where your book is placed within the marketplace and which bestseller lists it can appear on. Selecting the right categories can significantly increase discoverability and exposure. Choose strategically, some categories are highly competitive, while niche subcategories may require fewer sales to achieve bestseller ranking status.
Your seven Amazon backend keywords are critical for search optimization. These hidden search terms help Amazon match your book with relevant reader queries. Avoid repeating words already included in your title or categories. Instead, focus on long-tail keywords, reader intent phrases, comparison searches, and niche discovery terms that expand your book’s reach across Amazon search results.
If you’re not an expert, getting professional help is the best way to ensure your book is properly optimized for maximum search visibility.
Step 9: Price Your Book Strategically
Pricing is one of the most important factors in your Amazon KDP publishing strategy. It directly impacts your royalty rate, Amazon search ranking, conversion rate, and perceived book value. Set your price too high and you risk losing potential readers. Set it too low and your book may appear less valuable, reducing trust and sales.
For Amazon Kindle ebooks, the 70% royalty tier applies to books priced between $2.99 and $9.99. Outside this range, Amazon KDP reduces royalties to 35%. For most fiction ebooks, especially from first-time authors, the optimal pricing range is typically $2.99 to $4.99, where discoverability and conversion rates tend to balance effectively.
For nonfiction ebooks, particularly in niches such as business, self-help, health, or technical publishing, higher pricing between $4.99 and $9.99 often performs better. Readers in these categories generally expect to pay more for expertise, practical value, and authority-driven content.
A common ebook launch pricing strategy on Amazon KDP is to set the price at $0.99 during the first 3–5 days of release. This introductory pricing strategy helps drive early sales velocity, generate initial reviews, and improve Amazon ranking signals during the critical launch window. Once traction is established, authors typically increase the price to their long-term target.
For paperback pricing on Amazon KDP, your minimum price is determined by printing costs, which vary based on page count, trim size, and ink type. Amazon calculates this automatically, and any price above the minimum generates your royalty margin. Most independent authors price paperback books between $9.99 and $17.99, depending on book length, genre, and market positioning.
Step 10: Publish Your Book
Once your manuscript is professionally formatted, your book cover is complete, your metadata is fully optimised, and your ISBN is prepared, you are ready to move into the final stage: publishing on Amazon KDP (Kindle Direct Publishing).
The Amazon KDP upload process is simpler than most first-time authors expect. After creating your KDP account, you begin by selecting “Create a New Title” and entering your book details, metadata, and publishing information. This includes your title, subtitle, author name, book description, categories, and Amazon backend keywords, all of which directly impact your book’s discoverability and SEO performance.
Next, you will upload your formatted manuscript file (ebook or paperback interior) and your professional book cover design. Once uploaded, you set your pricing, royalty options, and distribution preferences, including whether your book will be available on Amazon marketplaces globally.
After submission, Amazon KDP typically reviews and approves new book uploads within 24 to 72 hours. Once approved, your book is officially published and becomes available for purchase on Amazon.
At this stage, you also need to decide between immediate publication or scheduled release (future publication date). Choosing a future publication date enables you to activate Amazon KDP pre-orders, a powerful launch strategy that allows readers to order your book before release. Pre-orders help build early sales momentum, improve launch-week ranking performance, and create a foundation for early reviews before your official publication date.
How to Market Your Self-Published Book
Publishing your book is the beginning of the process, not the end. The authors who succeed with self-publishing treat their books like business assets: they build platforms, run campaigns, and market consistently over time. The ones who struggle are the ones who publish and wait.
Here’s how to market your book effectively.
Build your author platform before launch. Your author platform includes your website, your email list, and your presence on at least one or two social media channels. Start building this before your book is finished if you can. An email list is your single most valuable long-term marketing asset. Research consistently shows that authors earning $10,000 or more per month average over 18,000 email subscribers. Those without a list earn roughly 5 times less.
Create pre-launch buzz. In the weeks before your release, share behind-the-scenes content from your writing process, do a cover reveal, and distribute advance reader copies to beta readers and book bloggers. Their early reviews and social posts build credibility and excitement before launch day.
Launch week strategy. Send an email campaign sequence to your list that includes a cover reveal, a pre-order announcement, a launch day email, and a follow-up asking for reviews. Consider pricing your ebook at $0.99 for the first few days to maximize downloads and early ranking momentum.
Amazon Advertising is one of the most powerful tools available to indie authors. You can start small, with a daily budget of $5 to $10, using Sponsored Products ads. The most effective approach is targeting the specific authors and books most similar to yours. It’s a long-term game that rewards patience and consistent optimization.
BookBub is another major tool. A BookBub Featured Deal can generate thousands of sales in a single day and is highly competitive to earn. Even without a Featured Deal, BookBub Ads let you target readers of specific authors and genres at a reasonable cost.
Social media and content marketing work differently by genre. For nonfiction authors, blog posts, podcast guest appearances, and YouTube videos that address your book’s topic create ongoing discoverability. For fiction authors, platforms like TikTok’s BookTok community can create organic momentum that traditional advertising can’t replicate.
Goodreads is where dedicated readers spend their time. Setting up your author profile, claiming your book, and engaging with reader communities there builds credibility with the most vocal segment of the reading audience.
However, these are only foundational book marketing strategies and publishing tactics. For a more comprehensive, results-driven approach, authors often benefit from professional support. The World Publishing Company offers comprehensive book marketing services for authors including targeted advertising campaigns, social media strategy, Amazon book launch planning, and long-term author brand development, designed for authors who want expert-led support to improve visibility, strengthen book positioning, and maximise launch performance.
How to Self-Publish a Book for Free
Yes, it is genuinely possible to self-publish a book for free using Amazon KDP (Kindle Direct Publishing). Amazon does not charge any upfront fees for uploading, publishing, or distributing your book. Authors can also use a free ISBN provided by KDP, access basic formatting tools, and publish without any initial financial investment. In this sense, you can publish a book at $0 cost.
However, what is free to publish is not always free in terms of results. The real challenge in self-publishing success lies in execution quality and market competitiveness. Free or low-cost cover design tools rarely produce covers that can compete in a professional marketplace. Skipping proper editing often leads to lower reader satisfaction and negative reviews. Most importantly, without a structured book marketing strategy, even a well-written book can remain invisible on Amazon.
A realistic minimum investment for a professionally positioned book typically falls between $900 and $2,850. This budget generally covers essential publishing services such as professional editing, high-quality cover design, formatting support, and a basic advertising or launch budget to improve visibility and early traction.
For authors working with limited budgets, a lean but strategic approach can still be effective: self-editing as thoroughly as possible, hiring a copyeditor instead of a full developmental edit, using the free KDP ISBN option, investing in a professional cover designer (since cover quality is the strongest visual selling factor), and using free tools like the Reedsy Book Editor for formatting. With this approach, it is possible to launch a book for under $600 while still maintaining a professional presentation.
However, even with a lean approach, it is almost always better to work with a professional publishing or marketing company rather than handling everything alone. A company brings structured editorial processes, experienced design standards, and most importantly proven book marketing and Amazon launch strategies that significantly improve visibility, ranking performance, and long-term sales potential.
The World Publishing Company provides comprehensive end-to-end publishing and book marketing services, helping authors move beyond basic self-publishing into a fully guided, professionally executed publishing strategy designed for real market performance.
How Much Does It Cost to Self-Publish a Book?
Here’s a realistic Amazon KDP self-publishing cost breakdown based on what most first-time authors actually invest when aiming for a professional-quality book that can compete in the marketplace:
- Professional Editing (Book Editing Services): $250 to $1,500+ depending on manuscript length and the level of editing required (copyediting, line editing, or developmental editing). This is one of the most important investments for avoiding negative reviews and improving reader experience.
- Cover Design (Professional Book Cover Design): $300 to $600 for a genre-specific, market-ready cover designed to compete on Amazon. Cover design is a major ranking and conversion factor in Amazon book marketing.
- Formatting (Ebook & Paperback Formatting): $0 to $450 depending on whether you use free tools like Kindle Create or hire a professional book formatter for print-ready and ebook-ready files.
- ISBN (Optional but Recommended for Branding): Around $125 if purchased independently through Bowker (primarily for US authors), though Amazon KDP also offers a free ISBN option.
- Initial Advertising & Book Launch Marketing: $100 to $500 for Amazon Ads or social media promotion to support launch momentum and improve early ranking signals, but it’s not really recommended without a proper vision and campaign to drive results.
Total Realistic Self-Publishing Investment Range
For a professionally produced first book, the typical range is $900 to $2,850.
Most successful first-time authors tend to invest around $1,500 to $2,000, striking a balance between quality and cost-efficiency. Importantly, higher spending does not automatically guarantee better results. Authors who invest strategically especially in editing, cover design, and launch marketing consistently outperform those who either underinvest or spend without a structured publishing strategy.
However, instead of managing these services separately, many authors now prefer working with a professional self-publishing and book marketing company, where everything is handled under a structured system editing, design, formatting, Amazon KDP setup, and marketing strategy all aligned toward one goal: commercial book success.
Common Self-Publishing Mistakes to Avoid
Even with a strong manuscript, several common self-publishing mistakes on Amazon KDP can significantly limit your book’s visibility, sales performance, and long-term success.
One of the most costly mistakes is skipping professional book editing services. Poor editing often leads to negative reviews mentioning typos, inconsistent pacing, or unclear writing. These issues directly impact your Amazon rating and conversion rate. Investing in professional editing before publication is essential for building credibility and improving reader satisfaction.
Another critical error is DIY book cover design without professional experience. In competitive Amazon book categories, cover design is a major ranking and conversion factor. An amateur-looking cover immediately signals low quality to potential readers, reducing click-through rates and overall sales. A professionally designed, genre-specific cover is one of the highest-ROI investments in self-publishing.
Many authors also fail to properly optimize Amazon KDP metadata, which includes the book title, subtitle, description, categories, and backend keywords. This is one of the most important elements of Amazon book SEO, as it determines how your book is indexed, discovered, and recommended in search results. Weak or poorly researched metadata can make even a high-quality book virtually invisible.
Not building an author email list before launch is another major missed opportunity. Without an audience, your book launch relies entirely on paid advertising or organic discovery. Building an email list in advance allows you to generate early sales, improve ranking signals, and create consistent launch momentum.
Improper Amazon KDP pricing strategy is also a common mistake. Pricing outside the 70% royalty range ($2.99 to $9.99 for ebooks) can significantly reduce earnings and visibility. Strategic pricing within this range is often the most effective for maximizing both royalties and discoverability.
Self-Publishing vs. Traditional Publishing: Which Is Better?
This is one of the most common questions aspiring authors ask: should you choose traditional publishing or self-publishing on Amazon KDP? The honest answer is that it depends entirely on your goals, expectations, and timeline.
Traditional publishing offers a few advantages that self-publishing typically does not. These include a potential (though rare) advance against royalties, access to established bookstore distribution channels, and a level of literary prestige that still holds value in certain academic and commercial circles. However, securing a traditional publishing deal usually requires finding a literary agent, going through extensive manuscript submissions, and facing a highly competitive selection process with no guaranteed acceptance.
On the other hand, self-publishing through Amazon KDP (Kindle Direct Publishing) offers significantly more control and accessibility. Authors retain full creative ownership, maintain 100% rights to their work, and earn substantially higher royalty rates typically 35% to 70% on Amazon KDP, compared to the standard 10% to 15% in traditional publishing. Self-publishing also allows you to publish within weeks instead of waiting years, update content at any time, adjust pricing strategies, and directly manage your book’s performance in real time.
For most first-time authors, especially those focused on getting published quickly, building an audience, and generating income from book sales, self-publishing is often the more practical and strategic path. While traditional publishing can resemble a long waiting process with uncertain outcomes, self-publishing places full control in the author’s hands allowing you to shape your publishing journey, marketing strategy, and long-term growth independently.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I self-publish a book for the first time?
Start with a finished, edited manuscript. Then get professional editing, design a cover that fits your genre, format your interior for both print and digital, get your ISBN, upload to Amazon KDP, set your metadata and pricing, and publish. Build your marketing strategy alongside the production process so you’re ready to promote on launch day.
How much does it cost to self-publish a book?
Most first-time authors invest between $900 and $2,850 to produce a professional-quality book. That covers editing, cover design, formatting, and initial marketing. You can publish for free using KDP’s tools, but skipping professional editing and cover design almost always results in poor sales and bad reviews.
Can I self-publish on Amazon for free?
Yes. Amazon KDP is completely free to upload and publish through. They provide a free ISBN, free cover creation templates, and no upfront costs. KDP earns its revenue through a percentage of your royalties on each sale.
Do self-published books need an ISBN?
Yes, but you don’t have to pay for one. Amazon KDP provides a free ISBN with every book you publish through their platform. If you want to own your publisher identity and distribute through bookstores and libraries, purchasing your own ISBN through Bowker gives you full control.
How long does it take to self-publish a book?
From a finished manuscript to a live book, the process typically takes four to eight weeks. Editing takes two to four weeks depending on your editor’s schedule, cover design takes one to two weeks, formatting takes a few days, and KDP review takes 24 to 72 hours. If you’re still writing the manuscript, add three to six months for drafting and self-editing.
How much do self-published authors make?
Income varies enormously. Most authors with one to three books earn less than $1000 per month. Income starts rising meaningfully at five to nine books and grows significantly at ten or more titles. Authors with a backlist of 25 or more books often see median earnings around $3,000 to $5,000 per month, with top earners reaching well above that. Building a backlist is consistently the most reliable long-term income strategy in self-publishing.
What is the best platform to self-publish a book?
Amazon KDP is the essential starting point because Amazon controls the majority of both print and ebook sales in the United States. Pair KDP with IngramSpark if you want your print book available through bookstores and libraries. For wide ebook distribution beyond Amazon, Draft2Digital distributes to Apple Books, Kobo, and Barnes and Noble in a single upload.
Is self-publishing worth it?
For most authors, yes, especially when the alternative is spending years in the traditional publishing queue with no guaranteed outcome. Self-publishing is worth it for authors who take the production side seriously: professional editing, a strong cover, optimized metadata, and a real marketing plan. Authors who treat it like a shortcut tend to be disappointed. Authors who treat it like a professional publishing project can build real, lasting income.
Final Thoughts: Your Self-Publishing Journey Starts Now
Learning how to self-publish a book on Amazon KDP can feel complex at first, but it becomes much simpler once broken down into clear, manageable stages. The full self-publishing process typically includes writing your manuscript, professional book editing, genre-specific cover design, formatting for both ebook and paperback, securing an ISBN, uploading to publishing platforms like Amazon KDP, optimising your metadata for Amazon SEO, setting strategic pricing, and executing a structured book marketing plan.
When viewed step by step, none of these stages are out of reach. Thousands of first-time authors successfully publish books every day, and many go on to build long-term writing careers and consistent income streams through self-publishing.
However, while it is possible to manage the process independently, working with experienced professionals can significantly improve your results. High-quality editing, market-driven cover design, and strategic Amazon KDP publishing support often make the difference between a book that simply gets published and a book that actually sells.
The World Publishing Company provides end-to-end self-publishing and book marketing services, including professional editing, cover design, formatting, Amazon KDP setup, and launch strategy. Their structured publishing approach is designed to help authors publish with confidence, improve visibility, and maximise both launch performance and long-term book sales.
Ready to get started? Explore the full range of services available:
- Professional Book Editing to polish your manuscript
- Book Formatting Services for print and digital
- Book Cover Design that sells
- Amazon Book Publishing support from upload to launch
- Self Publishing Services if you want an expert to handle the whole process
Your story deserves to reach its intended audience. Let’s make sure it gets there.
