This is almost the full ritual. The sacred geometry of margins, styles, and invisible formatting ghosts that ruin manuscripts at 2 a.m.
Here is the complete, calm, practical guide to formatting a book using Microsoft Word from the very beginning. No shortcuts, no mysterious menu clicking, no “just adjust it later” nonsense that turns into structural collapse.
The article itself is clean and professional so you can actually use it. Try not to treat Word like a rebellious typewriter.
A step-by-step manual from blank page to print-ready manuscript in MS Word
Book formatting is the process of structuring your manuscript so it reads professionally and prints correctly. Proper formatting ensures consistency, readability, and compatibility with publishing requirements, whether you plan to self-publish, submit to a publisher, or produce a print-on-demand edition.
This guide walks through every stage, beginning with document setup and ending with export.
- Preparing Before You Open the Document
Formatting works best when decisions are made early.
Changing the structure halfway through is like rebuilding a house after installing the roof.
Decide:
- Book size (trim size)
- Font style and size
- Line spacing
- Margin layout
- Chapter structure
- Front and back matter
- Print or digital or both
Common Book Trim Sizes
Choose a size before formatting because margins and layout depend on it.
Popular fiction sizes:
- 5 × 8 inches
- 5.25 × 8 inches
- 5.5 × 8.5 inches
- 6 × 9 inches (most common)
Nonfiction often uses:
- 6 × 9 inches
- 7 × 10 inches
- 8.5 × 11 inches (workbooks, manuals)
Publishers or print-on-demand services will specify their requirements.
- Creating a New Document
Open Microsoft Word
Create a blank document.
Immediately save the file with a clear name:
BookTitle_Manuscript_v1.docx
Turn on auto-save if available.
- Setting Page Size (Trim Size)
This defines the physical book dimensions.
- Go to Layout
- Click Size
- Choose your trim size
If your size is not listed:
- Click More Paper Sizes
- Enter width and height manually
- Apply to the whole document
Do this first. Everything else depends on it.
- Setting Margins (Including Gutter)
Books need different inner and outer margins because pages are bound.
- Go to Layout
- Click Margins
- Select Custom Margins
Typical Margin Setup
For 5.5 × 8.5 or 6 × 9 books:
- Top: 0.75″
- Bottom: 0.75″
- Outside: 0.625″
- Inside: 0.875″ to 1″
- Gutter: 0.125″ to 0.25″
Mirror Margins
Books alternate left and right pages.
In Margin settings:
- Choose Mirror Margins
This automatically flips inside/outside margins for facing pages.
- Set Orientation
Books are portrait.
Layout → Orientation → Portrait
- Choose the Correct Font
Readable serif fonts are standard for printed books.
Common body fonts:
- Garamond
- Times New Roman
- Baskerville
- Minion Pro
- Palatino
Avoid decorative fonts for body text.
Standard Settings
- Body text size: 10.5 to 12 pt
- Print fiction standard: 11 or 12 pt
- Line spacing: 1.15 to 1.5 (often 1.2 or 1.3 for print layout)
- Define Styles (Critical Step Most People Ignore)
Styles control consistency across the entire document.
Never manually format each heading. That way lies chaos.
Open Styles Panel:
Home → small arrow in Styles group
Create or modify:
- Normal (body text)
- Heading 1 (chapter titles)
- Heading 2 (subsections)
- Scene break style (optional)
Modify Normal Style
- Right-click “Normal”
- Modify
Set:
- Font
- Size
- Alignment (justified recommended)
- Line spacing
- First line indent (usually 0.25″ or 0.3″)
- Space after paragraph (often 0)
Apply to the entire document.
- Paragraph Formatting
Open Paragraph settings (small arrow in Paragraph group).
Recommended book paragraph settings:
- Alignment: Justified
- First line indent: 0.25″
- Spacing before: 0 pt
- Spacing after: 0 pt
- Line spacing: Multiple 1.2 to 1.3
Important rule:
First paragraph of chapter or after scene break has NO indent.
Create a separate style for that.
- Turn Off Widow/Orphan Problems
Word can manage lonely lines at page tops or bottoms.
Paragraph settings → Line and Page Breaks tab
Check:
- Widow/Orphan control
Optional:
- Keep with next (for headings)
- Page break before (for chapters)
- Set Up Chapters Properly
Each chapter begins on a new page.
Never press Enter repeatedly.
Use page breaks.
Insert Page Break
Ctrl + Enter
or
Insert → Page Break
- Section Breaks (For Advanced Control)
Sections allow different headers, footers, and numbering.
Use section breaks for:
- Front matter vs main book
- Different page numbering styles
- Landscape pages
- Special formatting areas
Insert → Break → Section Break (Next Page)
- Formatting Chapter Titles
Use Heading 1 style.
Common chapter formatting:
- Centred
- No indent
- Extra space above and below
- Larger font (14–18 pt)
Optional formats:
- CHAPTER ONE
- Chapter 1
- Roman numerals
- Title only
Consistency matters more than style choice.
- Scene Breaks
When a scene changes within a chapter:
Options:
- Blank line
- Centred symbol (***)
- Ornament divider
Create a specific style for scene breaks.
Do not improvise spacing manually.
- Headers and Footers
Books usually include:
- Page numbers
- Author name
- Book title
- Chapter title (optional)
Open header or footer by double-clicking page margin.
Different First Page
Chapter opening pages usually have no header.
In Header & Footer tools:
Check Different First Page
- Page Numbering
Most books place numbers:
- Top outer corner
- Bottom centre
- Bottom outer corner
Insert Page Numbers
Insert → Page Number → Choose position
For mirrored pages:
Use different odd and even headers.
- Roman Numerals for Front Matter
Front matter uses Roman numerals.
Main text uses Arabic numbers.
Steps:
- Insert a section break after the front matter
- Go to the front section
- Insert page numbers
- Format page numbers → Roman numerals
Then:
- Go to the main section
- Unlink header/footer
- Start numbering at 1
- Front Matter Structure
Typical order:
- Half title page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph (optional)
- Table of contents
- Foreword / Preface / Introduction
Each begins on a new page.
Often centred vertically.
- Creating a Table of Contents (Automatic)
If you used Heading styles, Word builds the TOC automatically.
References → Table of Contents → Automatic Table
Update anytime with:
Right-click → Update Field
- Back Matter Structure
After the main text:
- Acknowledgments
- Author bio
- Appendix
- Glossary
- Index
- About the author
- Other books
Same formatting rules as front matter.
- Hyphenation
Books use controlled hyphenation for justified text.
Layout → Hyphenation → Automatic
Check results manually.
- Managing Line Breaks and Spacing
Never use:
- Multiple spaces
- Multiple returns
- Manual alignment using spaces
Use formatting tools only.
Turn on paragraph marks to inspect layout:
Home → ¶ symbol
- Images and Illustrations
If your book includes images:
Insert → Pictures
Set wrapping:
- In line with text (safest)
- Square or tight (for advanced layouts)
Keep resolution at least 300 DPI for print.
- Footnotes and Endnotes
References → Insert Footnote
Word handles numbering automatically.
Use consistent style.
- Proofing Layout Before Export
Check carefully:
- Chapter starts on new pages
- No blank pages
- Headers correct
- Page numbers aligned
- Margins consistent
- No manual spacing errors
- Fonts embedded if required
- Scene breaks consistent
- TOC updated
Zoom out and scroll the entire book visually.
- Exporting for Print (PDF)
Most printers require PDF.
File → Save As → PDF
Choose:
- Standard (printing)
- High quality
Check:
- Page size correct
- Margins preserved
- Images sharp
- Preparing for E-Book Conversion
Word is not ideal for e-book layout, but clean formatting helps.
Remove:
- Headers
- Footers
- Page numbers
- Fixed spacing
- Complex layout
Use styles only.
Export to EPUB using conversion software if needed.
- Common Formatting Mistakes
These destroy professional appearance:
- Using tabs and spaces for alignment
- Manual font changes everywhere
- No styles
- Random spacing
- Enter key instead of page breaks
- Wrong margins
- Mixed fonts
- Inconsistent chapter titles
- Ignoring mirror margins
- Professional Polish Details
Small touches that elevate a book:
- Drop caps at chapter openings
- Decorative separators
- Consistent heading hierarchy
- Balanced white space
- Running headers
- Carefully chosen font pairing
Minimalism usually looks more professional.
- Printing a Test Copy
Always print sample pages.
Check:
- Margin comfort
- Readability
- Page balance
- Binding space
- Paper feel
Digital previews lie. Paper reveals truth.
- Final Checklist
Before declaring victory:
✔ Trim size correct
✔ Mirror margins set
✔ Styles applied consistently
✔ Chapter breaks clean
✔ Front matter complete
✔ Roman numerals correct
✔ Page numbering reset
✔ Headers aligned
✔ TOC updated
✔ Hyphenation checked
✔ Images high resolution
✔ Exported PDF verified
Book formatting in Word is not complicated. It is structured, methodical, and merciless toward improvisation.
The process is simple when done in order:
- Define physical structure
- Build style system
- Apply consistent formatting
- Control page layout
- Export cleanly
Word can produce fully professional print interiors when used deliberately. The secret is not technical skill. It is discipline and consistency.
Once styles and layout are set, formatting becomes automatic, predictable, and repeatable. That is the real goal. Not decoration. Not clever tricks. Stability.
A properly formatted manuscript becomes invisible. The reader notices only the story. And that, inconveniently, is the entire point.
You might want to read more about:
Structured Guide to Formatting Your Book for Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing
How do Royalties Work for Published Authors?
Subscribe
The Inner Orbit
We value your trust!
Your address is safe in the vault.
We’ll only use it to send you letters worth opening; no spells, no spam, no secret salesmen.





















