UK-focused guide

How to Assign a UK ISBN to Your Book

This page is specifically for UK-based ISBNs. It explains how to assign an ISBN to a book correctly, when you need separate ISBNs for different formats, how metadata registration works, what to do about the British Library legal deposit requirement, and how to generate a barcode for free.

Buy UK ISBNs See the step-by-step process

Important: Using an ISBN is not the same as pressing publish on Amazon KDP or IngramSpark. The ISBN identifies a specific product in the book trade. You still need to place it correctly in the book, attach the right metadata to it, and complete any post-publication obligations that apply in the UK.

Step-by-step, how UK ISBN assignment works

This is the practical sequence most UK self-publishers should follow.

1

Choose the exact edition

Decide whether you are assigning the ISBN to a paperback, hardback, EPUB, PDF, audiobook or another distinct format.

2

Reserve one ISBN per format

Each separately sold format or materially different digital version should normally have its own ISBN.

3

Prepare your metadata

Finalise title, subtitle, author name, format, price, publication date, trim size, binding and description.

4

Register the book record

Submit the ISBN against the correct title metadata so the book trade can identify the book properly.

5

Place the ISBN in the book

Add the ISBN to the copyright page and barcode area if you are publishing a print edition.

6

Publish and deposit

After publication, comply with UK legal deposit requirements and keep your metadata up to date.

1) First decide which product the ISBN belongs to

An ISBN identifies a specific product, not just a manuscript. Before assigning one, decide exactly what the customer is buying. This is where many self-publishers go wrong.

Paperback

Needs its own ISBN if sold as a print paperback edition.

Hardback

Needs a different ISBN from the paperback because it is a separate format.

EPUB ebook

Usually should have its own ISBN if distributed beyond a single closed platform.

PDF ebook

Usually should have a different ISBN from EPUB because it is a different digital format.

Audiobook

Normally needs its own ISBN if you are assigning ISBNs to that product type.

Revised edition

A substantially revised edition should receive a new ISBN.

Simple rule: if a retailer, library, distributor or reader needs to distinguish one version from another, the safest assumption is that it should have a separate ISBN. That usually means paperback, hardback, EPUB and PDF should not share one ISBN.

2) Know when you must use a distinct ISBN

Use a new ISBN when there is a change in:

  • Format, such as paperback versus hardback.
  • Digital file type, such as EPUB versus PDF.
  • Language edition.
  • Publisher of record.
  • Title, if the title itself changes materially.
  • Substantive text/content, such as a revised or expanded edition.
  • Digital usage constraints, where significantly different DRM or platform restrictions create a genuinely separate product.

You normally keep the same ISBN for:

  • A simple reprint with no meaningful content or format change.
  • A price change.
  • Minor marketing adjustments that do not create a new edition.

3) Prepare the metadata before you register the ISBN

The ISBN itself is only part of the job. You also need a clean title record. Before registration, prepare these details:

If you buy directly from Nielsen as your own publisher, your ISBN allocation then needs to be tied to a proper book record. Nielsen guidance for UK publishers points users to BookData / Title Editor for registering the first publication and maintaining title metadata. If you obtain an ISBN through this site under our imprint, we handle the publisher-side assignment framework and you should still make sure the distribution platform metadata matches the exact ISBN and edition.

4) Register the ISBN against the correct book

If you are the publisher of record

  1. Log into the relevant Nielsen / BookData title management system for your publisher account.
  2. Create a title record for the specific edition.
  3. Enter the assigned ISBN-13 exactly as issued.
  4. Add the book metadata, including title, contributors, format, pub date and price.
  5. Save and publish the record so booksellers, libraries and bibliographic systems can consume the data.

If you bought the ISBN through this site

  1. Use the ISBN only for the edition it was assigned to.
  2. Make sure Amazon KDP, IngramSpark, your printer or any sales platform uses that exact ISBN for that exact format.
  3. Keep your title, subtitle, author name and edition details consistent across all platforms.
  4. If you later release another format, buy another ISBN rather than reusing the first one.

What happens after registration? Your title data becomes much easier for the trade to recognise. Retailers, wholesalers, libraries and catalogues can match the ISBN to the correct product. That does not automatically guarantee listing everywhere, but it gives the book a proper industry identity.

5) Put the ISBN in the right place inside the book

For print books

  • Place the ISBN on the copyright page.
  • Place the barcode version on the back cover, usually in the lower right area.
  • Make sure the print ISBN matches the exact print edition, not the ebook version.

For ebooks

  • Include the ISBN in the front matter / copyright page of the ebook.
  • Use the correct unique ISBN for EPUB, PDF or other separately assigned digital versions.
  • Ensure retailer dashboards and uploaded files all reference the same assigned format.

6) UK legal requirement, British Library legal deposit

UK publishers should not ignore legal deposit. If you publish in the UK and Ireland, legal deposit rules apply to qualifying publications regardless of whether the book has an ISBN.

For printed publications, the British Library states that publishers should send a copy to the Legal Deposit Office, British Library, Boston Spa, Wetherby, West Yorkshire, LS23 7BY.

The British Library guidance says publishers should continue to submit print publications, and additional requests may also come via the Agency for Legal Deposit Libraries on behalf of the other legal deposit libraries.

Practical legal deposit checklist

  1. Publish the final version of the book.
  2. Send one print copy to the British Library Legal Deposit Office.
  3. Do this within the required legal timeframe, commonly stated as within one month of publication for print deposit obligations.
  4. Keep a record of when and what you sent.
  5. If contacted by the other legal deposit libraries or their agency, comply with any valid additional requests.

Important nuance: legal deposit is a publication obligation, not merely an ISBN step. Even if an ISBN helps identify the book, deposit duties arise because the work has been published in the UK, not because the number exists.

7) How to generate the ISBN barcode for free

Once you have a valid ISBN-13, you can generate a matching retail barcode for free using an online ISBN or EAN-13 barcode generator.

Typical barcode workflow

  1. Take your 13-digit ISBN exactly as assigned.
  2. Enter it into a barcode generator that supports ISBN-13 / EAN-13.
  3. Download a high-resolution PNG, SVG or vector file.
  4. Give that file to your cover designer or printer.
  5. Check that the printed barcode is clear, not stretched, and placed in a standard back-cover position.

Coming soon: this site will soon provide free barcodes for every ISBN purchased here, so buyers will be able to generate or download them directly without needing a third-party tool.

Useful practical links for UK authors

Common questions

Can I use one ISBN for paperback and hardback?

No. Those are separate formats and should normally have separate ISBNs.

Can I use one ISBN for EPUB and PDF?

Usually no. Different digital formats should generally have separate ISBNs, especially when they are distinct market products.

Do I always need an ISBN for Kindle?

Not always. Some closed platforms such as Kindle do not strictly require one, but if you assign one, it should be unique to that version and not reused across other formats.

What happens if I assign the wrong ISBN to the wrong format?

You create metadata confusion across retailers, libraries and distributors. It is much better to separate editions correctly from the start.

Need official UK ISBNs for your next release?

Buy official UK ISBNs here, then use this guide to assign each one correctly to your paperback, hardback or ebook edition.

Get ISBNs Read more about ISBNs