One ePUB that reads right everywhere.
Kindle, Kobo, Apple Books and ten more — from a single, clean file.
What ePUB production actually is
An eBook isn’t a PDF and it isn’t a Word file with a new name. It’s a structured, standards-compliant ePUB 3 — a small, self-contained website for your book that every reading app knows how to open.
Build it properly and it reads beautifully on any device, at any font size, and sails through every store’s upload check. Build it carelessly and it looks broken on half of them and gets rejected by the other half. The difference is entirely in the structure underneath, which is exactly the part most people can’t see.
Reflowable, the way it’s meant to work
A proper eBook is reflowable. The reader picks the font, the size, the screen orientation, the background — and the text rearranges itself to fit while the book stays whole. That flexibility is the entire reason eBooks exist.
Reflow only works when the structure is clean. Force the layout — fixed spacing, fake paragraph breaks, images jammed where text should flow — and the file becomes fragile: fine at one size, shattered at another. We build files that hold together at every size, on every device. It’s invisible work, which is why people underestimate it.
Validated, so it uploads the first time
Every major store runs your file through an automated gate before it goes live. We clear that gate before you ever see the file: every ePUB is validated against EPUBCheck, the industry standard the stores themselves rely on.
The result: a file that uploads to Kindle, Kobo, Apple Books, Nook, Google Play and 10+ readers without rejections — so launch day is about readers, not error codes. We include a Kindle-compatible export on request and a store-upload checklist so nothing surprises you.
Full breakdown of what stores actually check: read “What makes an ePUB pass every store’s checks” in the journal.
What’s included
- Reflowable ePUB 3
- Kindle, Kobo, Apple Books, Nook, Google Play & 10+ readers
- Linked table of contents & metadata
- Embedded fonts and styled drop caps where wanted
- Cover image embedding
- EPUBCheck-validated
- Kindle-compatible export on request
What you receive
- Validated reflowable ePUB 3 — Clean, store-ready, tested across devices.
- Kindle-compatible export — For KDP, on request.
- Store-upload checklist — So you upload with confidence, not guesswork.
Why a Word export usually isn’t enough
Word can export something it calls an ePUB. Sometimes it even passes a store check. Often it doesn’t — it drags along a mess of invisible formatting that bloats the file, breaks reflow, and trips the validator in ways that are maddening to diagnose.
Here’s the trap: you test the file on your own phone, it looks fine, you relax. Then it fails validation, because your phone is forgiving and the validator is not. Now you’re debugging XML the night before launch instead of telling readers your book is out.
The tools are free. The expertise isn’t. A clean ePUB is the difference between “live in an hour” and “stuck for a week.”
eBook questions, answered
Will it work on Kindle?
Yes. We provide a Kindle-compatible export for KDP on request, alongside the standard ePUB for every other store.
Can you make a fixed-layout eBook for a picture book or cookbook?
Reflowable is right for most text-led books. Image-heavy titles that need fixed layout are a different build — tell us what you have and we’ll advise.
Do print and eBook need to match?
They don’t have to be identical — print is fixed, eBook reflows — but they should feel like the same book. The Complete package builds both from one source so they stay consistent.
I already have an ePUB that’s getting rejected. Can you fix it?
Often, yes. Send it over and we’ll tell you whether it’s a repair or a rebuild.
Do you handle metadata and the table of contents?
Yes — both. A linked TOC and clean metadata are part of every build, and they’re what make the book navigable and findable in stores.
Other services
Start your book.
Send us your manuscript and what you need. We reply with a plan, a fixed quote and a timeline — usually within 24 hours.