Why KDP Royalties Feel Complicated at First
Authors often expect one simple royalty rule, but Amazon KDP uses different royalty logic for different formats. Kindle eBooks use royalty options that depend on pricing and eligibility, print books depend heavily on manufacturing costs, and Kindle Unlimited income comes from a pooled pages-read system. Because of this, understanding KDP royalties requires looking at format, pricing, and reader behavior together rather than treating all revenue as one category.
Kindle eBook Royalties: 35% vs 70%
For Kindle eBooks, the core royalty question is usually whether a book fits the 35% or 70% structure. The higher option can create much better earnings per sale, but it also depends on pricing rules, supported territories, and delivery cost deductions. This means a lower list price is not always worse, and a higher royalty percentage does not automatically guarantee the strongest real-world outcome if the pricing strategy is weak.
Print Royalties: Paperback and Hardcover
Paperback and hardcover royalties work differently because Amazon must manufacture each copy. That means printing cost becomes a direct part of the royalty calculation. Page count, trim size, ink type, and marketplace all affect how much is left after printing is deducted. This is why two books with the same list price can still produce very different print royalties depending on production choices.
Kindle Unlimited Royalties and Pages Read
Kindle Unlimited adds another layer because authors are not paid per book sale in the usual sense. Instead, royalties depend on pages read and the share of the KDP Select Global Fund. This can be very powerful for books that generate strong reader completion, but it also means KU income is less fixed and more dynamic than ordinary unit-sale royalties.
Use Royalty Understanding to Improve Revenue Decisions
The real value of understanding KDP royalties is not just knowing the formulas. It is being able to make better decisions about price, format, production cost, niche strategy, and expected income. Authors who understand royalties clearly can use calculators, BSR-based estimates, and pricing experiments much more effectively than authors who focus only on headline percentages.
