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Amazon Adjusts Page Size Measurement for Kindle Unlimited Royalties, Also Adds a Cap

Ever since July 2015 Amazon has been paying authors and publishers with works in Kindle Unlimited by the page, and on 1 February 2016 Amazon adjusted how it calculated the page size.

Amazon quietly announced on the KDP support forums on Monday that it had developed a new algorithm for calculating the Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count, or KENPC.

The retailer said that the new method, which has been dubbed KENPC v2.0, "makes a number of improvements to how we standardize font, line height, and spacing used to normalize the length of each book relative to one another. This change will impact the KENPC of some titles while others will remain unchanged. The average KENPC will change less than 5%, although individual books’ changes may be larger or smaller. The new KENPC approach will be applied uniformly to all KDP Select books and all versions of those books."

this cat is secretly responsible for the algorithm

this cat is secretly responsible for the algorithm

In related news, Amazon has also added a cap on the maximum number of pages an author can earn from a single reader  in a single title (3,000 Kindle Edition Normalized Pages).

Amazon says that only the very longest books will be affected, and given that authors have reported that, say, a 300 page paperback has a KENPC of around 500 to 600 and that a box set ran to around 2,000, I would bet Amazon is correct in that regard.

H6851654745_8c8b1d74d1_bowever, early reports suggest that the new  KENPC v2.0 algorithm will not have a similar mild impact. Several authors are reporting a sharp decline. One said that "I had one of my 15 books drop 12.5% in KENP".

Another reported "Mine dropped by exactly 13% which would amount to about 26 cents per book based on a half cent per page payout. The format and fonts are pretty normal and everything is straight text with no gaps."

And a third said that "I went over all my books and didn’t find any significant changes – maybe a dozen pages here or there, out of 300-600. So no problems here."

So clearly results are mixed.

images by pjmorsewonderferret, marco_1186

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Comments


Felipe Adan Lerma February 2, 2016 um 10:13 am

Needed clarification about the 3000 pg cap and found this on the KDP info pg :

"Author earnings are then determined by their share of total pages read, up to a total of 3,000 pages per customer per title."

https://kdp.amazon.com/help?topicId=AI3QMVN4FMTXJ

Sounds good to me.

Nate Hoffelder February 2, 2016 um 10:24 am

I added the extra detail. Thank you for pointing out the omission.


FSkornia February 2, 2016 um 10:17 am

I don’t understand why they focus the payments on "pages", Amazon has had a Kindle-standard measurement in books since the launch in 2007 – "locations". The locations remain constant no matter how you adjust font size, line height, and spacing. Longer books have more locations than shorter books, so they’d receive higher royalties, just like with the "page" count. This would negate any arguments about the number of words per "page" or what actually defines a "page".


Margaret Muir February 2, 2016 um 3:13 pm

I believe the payment amount stated in this article of 'a half cent per page' is incorrect. If this was the case we would all be rolling money. The correct amount is $0.0058 or thereabouts see : https://the-digital-reader.com/2015/08/15/kindle-unlimited-paid-authors-0-0058-per-page-read-in-july/

Nate Hoffelder February 2, 2016 um 3:21 pm

That was just a back of the envelope calculation, not anything permanent.


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