Design

eBook vs. Print Cover: Dimensions, Specs, and Design Differences

By Spines Publishing USA Editorial TeamJune 28, 20268 min read
eBook vs. Print Cover: Dimensions, Specs, and Design Differences

Ebook covers are a single front image; print covers are a wraparound with a spine and back. Here are the exact dimensions, bleed, resolution, and spine-width math you need for KDP and IngramSpark.

Key Takeaways

  • An ebook cover is a single front-only image; a print cover is one wraparound file spanning back cover, spine, and front cover.
  • The recommended ebook cover size is 2,560 × 1,600 px (a 1.6:1 ratio) at 72 dpi or higher.
  • Print covers must be built at 300 dpi with bleed, and the spine width depends on your page count and paper type.
  • Spine width (inches) ≈ page count × paper thickness; you can't finalize a print cover until your interior page count is locked.
  • Want covers built to exact retailer specs the first time? Call Spines Publishing USA at (708) 575-4611 or email info@spinespublishingusa.com.

Your ebook and print editions need two fundamentally different cover files. An ebook cover is a single, front-only image. A print cover is a single wraparound file that includes the back cover, the spine, and the front cover, plus bleed, all sized precisely to your book's page count and trim size. Getting the specs wrong is one of the most common reasons covers get rejected at upload. Here's exactly what each format requires.

Standard eBook Cover Dimensions

Ebook covers are the simpler of the two. You need one portrait-orientation image, front cover only, no spine or back.

SpecRecommendedNotes
Dimensions2,560 × 1,600 pxAmazon KDP's recommended size
Aspect ratio1.6 : 1 (height : width)Tall rectangle; same ratio across retailers
Resolution72 dpi minimumHigher is fine; pixels matter more than dpi on screen
File formatJPEG or TIFFRGB color, under ~50 MB
Minimum size1,000 px on shortest sideBelow this, retailers may reject

Because the ebook cover is what readers see as a thumbnail while shopping, design it for legibility at small sizes, see what makes a book cover sell for the design side.

Print Wraparound Cover Anatomy

A print cover is one continuous image, read left to right when laid flat: back cover, then spine, then front cover. Each panel has a job:

The barcode area on the back cover must be kept clear, usually about 2 × 1.2 inches in the lower-right. Retailers place the scannable ISBN barcode there automatically.

Spine Width Calculation by Page Count

The spine is the trickiest part, because its width is determined entirely by your page count and paper type. This is why you cannot finalize a print cover until your interior formatting is complete and the final page count is locked. The formula:

Spine width (inches) = number of pages × paper thickness per page. White paper ≈ 0.002252"/page; cream paper ≈ 0.0025"/page (KDP figures).

Page CountWhite Paper SpineCream Paper Spine
120 pages~0.27 in~0.30 in
200 pages~0.45 in~0.50 in
300 pages~0.68 in~0.75 in
400 pages~0.90 in~1.00 in

Most platforms provide a free cover template generator: you enter your trim size, page count, and paper type, and it produces a PDF template with exact spine width and bleed lines to design within. Always use the current template, spine math is unforgiving.

Bleed, Margins, and Resolution Requirements

KDP vs. IngramSpark Cover Spec Differences

The two major print platforms have slightly different requirements, and if you publish to both (a common wide-distribution strategy, see IngramSpark vs KDP), you'll need a cover file for each.

SpecAmazon KDPIngramSpark
File formatPDF (print-ready)PDF/X-1a:2001 preferred
Bleed0.125 in0.125 in
Spine text min. pages~100 pages~48–80 pages
Template sourceKDP cover calculatorIngramSpark cover template generator
Color profileCMYK / RGB acceptedCMYK (US Web Coated) preferred

Because the spine width and total canvas differ with each platform's exact specs and your page count, the safest approach is to generate a fresh template from each platform and build (or have your designer build) to that template precisely.

Skip the spec headaches entirely

Spines Publishing USA delivers print- and ebook-ready cover files built to exact retailer specifications, correct bleed, spine, resolution, and barcode area, the first time. Call (708) 575-4611, email info@spinespublishingusa.com, or explore cover design.

Explore Cover Design

The design of your cover sells the book; the specs make sure it actually prints and uploads cleanly. Nail the ebook ratio, lock your page count before finalizing the print wraparound, build at 300 dpi with proper bleed, and use each platform's current template. Get those right and your cover sails through upload, looking exactly as intended.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the standard ebook cover dimensions?

Amazon KDP recommends 2,560 × 1,600 pixels, a 1.6:1 height-to-width ratio (a tall rectangle), at 72 dpi or higher, saved as RGB JPEG or TIFF. The minimum is about 1,000 pixels on the shortest side. This same ratio works across major ebook retailers.

How do I calculate spine width for a print book?

Multiply your page count by the paper thickness per page: roughly 0.002252 inches per page for white paper and 0.0025 inches for cream (KDP figures). A 300-page book is about 0.68 inches (white) or 0.75 inches (cream). You must lock your final page count before designing the spine.

What's the difference between an ebook and print cover file?

An ebook cover is a single front-only image. A print cover is one continuous wraparound file containing the back cover, spine, and front cover, plus 0.125-inch bleed on every edge, built at 300 dpi and sized to your exact page count and trim size.

What bleed and resolution do print covers need?

Print covers require 0.125 inches (3.2 mm) of bleed beyond every outer edge and must be 300 dpi at final size, designed in CMYK. Keep title and key elements at least 0.25 inches inside the trim line, and leave the lower-right back cover clear for the barcode.

Are KDP and IngramSpark cover specs the same?

They're similar but not identical, spine-text page minimums, preferred color profiles, and exact PDF requirements differ. If you publish to both for wide distribution, generate a fresh template from each platform and build a separate cover file to each one's precise specifications.

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