Price & Royalties
How Kindle Unlimited Pays: KENP Page Reads Explained
KU pays from a floating monthly fund divided by pages read — not by the sale. The KENP rate, the $66.9M Global Fund, and the 3,000-page cap.
Kindle Unlimited does not pay per borrow. It does not pay per sale. Amazon pays per page actually read — drawn from a shared monthly pool called the KDP Select Global Fund, divided across every page read on the platform, and expressed as a floating per-page rate. Understanding that model is not a technicality. It is the difference between planning your KU income on a number that will hold and planning it on one that will leave you short when the month closes.
The core math: KU royalty = your KENP pages read × the monthly per-page rate. The rate averaged $0.00445 per page in 2025 and sat near $0.004888 in May 2026. Plan at a $0.004 floor — never model $0.005. A fully read 300-page novel earns roughly $1.35; a 500-page novel earns roughly $2.25. KU is a volume business: income compounds across thousands of reads and across series depth, not per borrow.
How does Amazon calculate what Kindle Unlimited pays you?
The formula is public but the inputs move every month. Amazon aggregates a KDP Select Global Fund, then divides it by the total number of Kindle Edition Normalized Pages read across the entire platform that month. Each enrolled author receives a share proportional to their own pages read. Per Amazon's official Kindle Unlimited royalty documentation, the calculation is straightforward: author royalty = (your KENP pages read) × (monthly KENP rate). The rate is not posted in advance. Amazon announces it around the 15th of the following month, which means you can estimate KU income in real time but cannot confirm the exact rate until roughly six weeks after the earning period closes.
The following table shows what a completed read pays across common book lengths at both the conservative planning floor and the 2025 average rate, per data from PublishRank's KU page-reads analysis and WritersDigestOnline's earnings calculator:
| Book length | Approx. KENP pages | Earnings at $0.004/page (floor) | Earnings at $0.00445/page (2025 avg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 50,000 words | ~200–350 KENP | $0.80–$1.40 | $0.89–$1.56 |
| 80,000 words | ~400–550 KENP | $1.60–$2.20 | $1.78–$2.45 |
| 100,000 words | ~500–650 KENP | $2.00–$2.60 | $2.23–$2.89 |
| 3-book romance box set | ~2,400–2,700 KENP | $9.60–$10.80 | $10.68–$12.02 |
Compare those figures against a direct sale: a $2.99 ebook at the 70% KDP royalty earns roughly $2.03. A full read of a standard 300-page novel at the 2025 average rate earns roughly $1.35 — about two-thirds of a single direct purchase. KU closes that gap only when borrow volume is substantially higher than sale volume, or when the reader continues through an entire series, generating cumulative KENP that no standalone sale can match.
How has the Global Fund grown — and why hasn't the per-page rate climbed with it?
The Fund's growth is real. According to Written Word Media's monthly payout tracker, the Global Fund launched at $2.5 million in July 2014 and reached $66.9 million in May 2026 — a 27-fold nominal increase over twelve years. In dollar terms, KU has become a meaningful royalty pool for the self-publishing industry collectively, running at roughly $700–800 million per year across all marketplaces.
Yet the per-page KENP rate has not climbed proportionally. The highest rate recorded under the current KENP system was approximately $0.005779 in July 2015, when the program was new and subscriber counts were still modest. By 2024–2025 the US rate settled into a range of about $0.0040 to $0.0050, averaging $0.0042 in 2024 and $0.00445 in 2025. The reason is structural: platform-wide pages read grew even faster than the fund, because subscriber counts and catalog volume both expanded enormously. More money in the pool does not help if proportionally more pages are drawing from it.
The 2025 data shows the seasonal swings every KU author must account for. October 2025 hit a five-year high of $0.005007 — the first month above $0.005 since roughly 2020 — while January 2025 came in at $0.004091, a 22% spread within the same calendar year on the same pages. The pattern is consistent across eleven-plus years of rate history: holiday months (October–December) typically see subscription growth outpace reading volume, lifting the rate; summer months (June–August) see the opposite as heavy reading dilutes the per-page share. Model for the floor; bank the seasonal upside when it arrives.
What is KENPC normalization and how does it set your book's page count?
KENP stands for Kindle Edition Normalized Pages — Amazon's standardized length unit that makes consistent across devices, display settings, and fonts. Per BookBeam's analysis of KENPC v3.0 (released August 2017), Amazon assigns each enrolled ebook a normalized page count using a fixed reference font, line height, and spacing. A reader who enlarges the text on their device does not generate more KENP for you; one who shrinks it does not generate fewer. The system standardizes both so authors cannot game payout through formatting.
The practical conversion: approximately 250–300 manuscript words equal one KENPC page, and Amazon's normalization typically produces a KENPC total about 10–20% lower than a raw word-count-divided-by-250 estimate. Front matter placed before your Start Reading Location (SRL) — copyright pages, dedications, table of contents — is excluded from your KENPC count, because measurement begins at the SRL (normally set to Chapter 1) and runs to the end. Your KENPC count is visible in KDP Bookshelf under "Promote and Advertise." Verify it before building any income model. The number Amazon assigns and the page count listed on your Amazon detail page can differ; the KDP dashboard figure is the one that governs your royalties.
What is the 3,000-KENP cap and who does it actually affect?
Amazon pays a maximum of 3,000 KENP per title per customer borrow. Pages read beyond 3,000 generate no royalty credit. Only the first read-through by a given customer counts; re-reads produce no additional KENP income. At the May 2026 rate of $0.004888, that 3,000-page ceiling translates to a maximum possible payout of roughly $14.66 per borrow — regardless of how long the book actually is.
For most novels the cap is invisible: an 80,000-word book runs about 400–550 KENP, well below the threshold. The cap becomes a real design constraint for box sets. A romance novel typically runs 800–900 KENP, so a three-book bundle lands near 2,400–2,700 KENP — safely under the cap and earning payment on every page. Add a fourth book at the same length and the bundle reaches 3,200–3,600 KENP, pushing 200–600 pages into the unpaid zone on every borrow. The standard architecture for romance box sets is therefore three to four books, structured to land as close to 3,000 KENP as possible without exceeding it.
Authors who publish both individual books and a companion box set can use a technique sometimes called dual-revenue stacking: a reader who borrows the individual title and later borrows the box set triggers two separate KENP payouts, because Amazon treats them as distinct titles. The same reader effectively generates two first-read-through credits across the two products.
How long does it take to get paid for Kindle Unlimited reads?
KU royalties carry a 60-day payment lag. Pages read during January are not paid until the end of March. The KENP rate for January is announced around the 15th of February — you learn the rate before the money arrives, but you cannot spend January's KU income in January or February. This lag matters acutely for authors who draw 60–80% of their total income from KU borrows. Budget your KU royalties two months in arrears, not as current-month revenue, and maintain enough working capital to cover launch-month expenses without relying on that month's page-read income.
How do you maximize Kindle Unlimited revenue without padding?
The instinct to inflate page counts is both understandable and self-defeating. Amazon's enforcement history is explicit: the original 2014–2015 per-borrow model was abandoned after immediate book-stuffing abuse. KENPC v3.0 arrived in August 2017 to close font and spacing exploits. Per Amazon's KDP Content Guidelines, prohibited formatting includes excessive blank pages, forced white text, margin padding exceeding one-quarter of the screen width, and any bonus content conditioned on readers reaching a page milestone. Violations can trigger book removal, account closure, and forfeiture of unpaid royalties. The 2017–2018 book-stuffing scandal — which David Gaughran documented in detail — led directly to the 3,000-KENP cap as a structural countermeasure. The manipulation tools are known and monitored.
The legitimate lever is read-through rate: the percentage of borrowed pages readers actually reach. A 300-page book borrowed 1,000 times at 80% average completion generates 240,000 KENP. The same book at 40% completion generates 120,000 KENP. Revenue doubles without changing a single page, purely by keeping readers. Research from PublishRank's KU strategy analysis identifies a consistent threshold: readers who pass the 15% mark of a KU book complete at significantly higher rates than those who abandon in the opening pages. The first chapter is the highest-leverage point in any KU income strategy.
Series structure then compounds the read-through effect. A five-book series at 500 KENP per title offers up to 2,500 KENP of potential earnings per reader, against a standalone's 500 KENP ceiling. At the 2025 average rate, a reader who completes all five books generates roughly $11.25 in KENP versus $2.25 for a standalone — a 5× revenue multiplier from the same reader and the same borrow decision on Book 1. Per NovelPad's KU income analysis, a seven-book series with 500 monthly borrows at 70% average completion can produce over $3,100 per month in KENP alone — from the same borrow velocity a standalone author converts into a fraction of that sum. The math that powers high KU income is not a longer book. It is a deeper catalog that readers binge end to end.
The planning rules that survive every rate fluctuation: set your SRL to Chapter 1, verify your KENPC count in the KDP dashboard, budget at $0.004 per page, and design your catalog for series read-through. KU rewards the author who earns every page across a long series, not the one who merely accumulates them on a single title.
Frequently asked
What is KENP and how does Amazon calculate the per-page rate?
KENP stands for Kindle Edition Normalized Pages — Amazon's standardized page-count unit that strips out font size, line height, and device display differences so every page earns the same regardless of how a reader formats their Kindle. The per-page rate is set monthly: Amazon totals the KDP Select Global Fund for that month, then divides it by every KENP page read across the entire platform. The result is announced around the 15th of the following month. That rate has averaged about $0.00445 per page in 2025 and floated between roughly $0.0040 and $0.0050 over the past several years. Plan at the $0.004 floor; treat anything higher as upside rather than budget.
How much does a full Kindle Unlimited read pay compared to a direct sale?
A fully read 300-page novel earns roughly $1.26–$1.35 in KENP at 2025 average rates. A $2.99 direct sale at the 70% KDP royalty earns about $2.03. The gap is real: KU pays less per reader interaction than a direct purchase at the same price point. The model only tilts in KU's favor when borrow volume substantially exceeds sale volume, or when the reader continues borrowing across a multi-book series — generating cumulative KENP that a single sale cannot match. Romance, cozy mystery, and LitRPG genres, where 70–89% of top titles carry the KU badge, see borrow rates high enough to compensate. For nonfiction priced at $7.99 or above, the per-sale royalty almost always outperforms the per-page trickle.
What is the 3,000-KENP cap and how does it affect box set publishing?
Amazon pays a maximum of 3,000 KENP per title per customer borrow, per KDP's official royalty documentation. Pages read beyond 3,000 on a single borrow generate no royalty. Additionally, only the first read-through by a given customer counts; a re-read produces no KENP credit. For box sets, this cap defines the maximum payable size. A romance novel typically runs 800–900 KENP, so a three-book bundle lands near 2,400–2,700 KENP — safely under the cap. A four-book bundle at the same length can reach 3,200–3,600 KENP, pushing 200–600 pages into the unpaid zone on every single borrow. Standard practice is to structure romance box sets at three to four books and stay below the 3,000-page ceiling.
How long does it take to receive Kindle Unlimited royalties?
KU royalties carry a 60-day payment lag. Pages read during January are not paid until the end of March. The KENP rate for January is announced around the 15th of February — so you learn the rate before you receive the money, but you cannot spend that income in January or February. This lag matters significantly for cash-flow modeling. Do not treat anticipated KU earnings as current-month revenue. Budget your KU income two months in arrears and maintain enough working capital to cover the gap. Authors who rely on KU for 60–80% of total income, per Freewrite Store's KU income breakdown, are especially exposed to this timing mismatch during launch months.
Does a bigger KDP Select Global Fund mean a higher per-page rate for authors?
Not necessarily — and this is the most important misconception about KU economics. The KENP rate equals the Global Fund divided by total platform pages read. The Fund grew from $2.5 million at launch in July 2014 to $66.9 million in May 2026 — a 27-fold increase — yet the per-page rate has trended lower than the 2015 peak of about $0.005779 per page. The reason is that KU subscriber counts and total pages read grew even faster than the fund itself. As Written Word Media's payout tracker documents, July 2023 hit the modern all-time low rate of $0.003989 even though the fund that month was nearly $49.5 million — far larger than in the early years when rates were higher. Fund growth and rate growth are not the same thing.
Should nonfiction authors enroll their books in Kindle Unlimited?
Nonfiction authors should approach KU with skepticism. A 200-page nonfiction book earning roughly $0.84 per full read at the $0.004 floor falls far short of the same book selling at $7.99 (70% royalty = $5.59 per sale). KU readers also tend not to finish reference or how-to books cover to cover — partial reads generate only a fraction of the potential KENP. Nonfiction priced above $9.99 is particularly poor fit for KU: the reader pays the same flat subscription regardless of list price, eliminating any premium-pricing advantage. Kindlepreneur's category analysis confirms low KU saturation in nonfiction compared to romance or thriller. The standard guidance: if your genre's top 100 shows fewer than 30 KU badges, the sale is usually a better instrument than the borrow.
What is the Start Reading Location and why does it affect my KENP count?
The Start Reading Location (SRL) is the page where Amazon begins measuring your KENPC — typically set to Chapter 1. KENP measurement runs from the SRL to the end of the book. Front matter placed before the SRL (copyright notices, dedications, acknowledgments) does not count toward your KENPC total. If the SRL is incorrectly placed on the copyright page or a blank page, your KENPC is understated and you earn less per full read than the book's actual length should pay. Per Amazon's official KU documentation, you can verify your KENPC count in KDP Bookshelf under "Promote and Advertise" after publishing. Check it before building any income projection from your book's length.