MARGINS, GUTTERS, BLEED & TRIM — EXPLAINED IN SIMPLE TERMS FOR AUTHORS

Most printing problems come from a misunderstanding of four key elements: margins, gutters, bleed and trim. These determine how your book looks once it is physically printed and bound. If any of them are set incorrectly, the results can include:

  • cut-off text

  • awkward spacing

  • white edges around images

  • text disappearing into the spine

  • expensive reprints

Below is a simple, author-friendly explanation of each term and why it matters.

1. Margins — The Safe Zone for Your Text

Margins are the empty space around the edges of the page. Their purpose is simple:

Margins stop your text from looking cramped or being cut off when trimmed.

If margins are too small:

  • the book looks cheap

  • it becomes difficult to read

  • text can drift dangerously close to the edge

  • trimming variations can cut into the content

Margins must match:

  • the book size

  • the book’s purpose

  • whether the book is text-only or image-heavy

Most importantly, margins depend on the final page count. More pages = thicker spine = different margin balance.

Margins should not be set during the writing stage. They are a design decision.

2. Gutters — Extra Space for the Spine

The gutter is the inner margin where the pages meet the spine. When a book is bound, some of the page gets pulled inward. Without a proper gutter, the reader must force the book open to see the text — or worse, the text disappears entirely into the spine.

A correct gutter prevents this by adding extra space on the inner edge of each page.

Gutter size depends on:

  • page count

  • paper thickness

  • binding method

  • book size

For example:

  • A 60-page book needs a small gutter.

  • A 300-page book needs a much larger gutter.

This is why you cannot set your own gutter while writing. It must be calculated after your manuscript is finalised.

3. Bleed — Extra Image Area That Gets Trimmed Off

If your book includes:

  • illustrations

  • photos

  • backgrounds

  • colour blocks

  • full-page artwork

…you will need bleed.

Bleed is extra image area that extends past the trim line. It is intentionally printed and then cut off. This ensures that your artwork reaches the edge of the page without leaving a white border.

If you do not include bleed, the printed result may have thin white edges.

Bleed must be set in the design software — not in Word or Google Docs.

Common bleed size:
3 mm (Australia / EU) or 0.125 inch (US) on all sides.

4. Trim — The Final Cut Size of Your Book

Trim size is simply:

The exact size of the printed book once it has been cut down by the guillotine.

Examples:

  • A5

  • 6” x 9”

  • 210 × 210 mm

  • 8.5” × 11”

During printing, pages are printed slightly larger than the trim size and then cut down. This is why bleed exists: without extra image area, trimming would expose unprinted edges.

Trim size affects:

  • page count

  • layout design

  • image proportions

  • printing cost

  • cover size and spine width

Trim size must be chosen before design begins, but after the writing stage is finished.

Why Authors Often Struggle With These Concepts

Because writing tools like Word, Google Docs and Canva do not automatically protect you from:

  • incorrect margins

  • missing gutters

  • missing bleed

  • wrong trim sizes

This is why so many manuscripts arrive with:

  • text too close to the edges

  • squeezed or uneven margins

  • pages without bleed

  • cut-off images

  • incorrectly sized artwork

  • inconsistent chapter layouts

These problems can only be fixed during the layout and design stage, using proper tools.

A Simple Rule to Remember

Margins and gutters protect the text.
Bleed and trim protect the artwork.

Word and Google Docs cannot manage these correctly. Canva can manage bleed but not gutters. InDesign and professional layout tools manage all four elements properly.

When Should Authors Think About Margins, Gutters, Bleed and Trim?

Only after the manuscript is complete.

This is because:

  • margins depend on book size

  • gutters depend on page count

  • bleed depends on images and artwork

  • trim depends on your chosen format

  • spine width depends on paper + total pages

Attempting to set these earlier creates instability and forces redesign later.

What Happens When These Are Incorrect?

Incorrect margins
→ cramped pages, unprofessional appearance

Incorrect gutters
→ text disappears into the spine

Missing bleed
→ white lines at the page edges

Wrong trim
→ file rejected by printers or misaligned cuts

These issues are the most common reasons books fail printer checks, require correction fees, or result in disappointing print quality.

The Good News

You don’t need to understand the technical setup in detail — you only need to:

  • write your manuscript cleanly

  • avoid formatting during writing

  • export as a .docx file

  • let the layout stage handle the margins, bleed, trim and gutter

A professional layout tool — or a professional designer — will manage all of this with precision.