KDP CoverLab vs Canva for Book Covers
Both tools can design book covers โ but only one understands Amazon KDP's technical requirements. Here's an honest comparison.
Quick comparison
| Feature | KDP CoverLab Pro | Canva |
|---|---|---|
| Auto spine width calculation | โ Built in | โ Manual |
| KDP bleed/trim zones | โ Automatic | โ DIY |
| Full wraparound cover PDF | โ One-click | โ Not supported |
| Hardcover case laminate | โ Full geometry | โ No |
| 300 DPI export | โ Always | โ Pro only |
| Export formats | PNG, PDF, JPEG, TIFF | PNG, PDF, JPG |
| 14 KDP trim sizes | โ All built in | โ Manual setup |
| Spine text threshold (79 pages) | โ Auto-enforced | โ No awareness |
| Free tier | โ Full designer, no exports | โ Limited features |
| Price (unlimited) | $99/yr | ~$120/yr (Pro) |
The core problem with Canva for KDP covers
Canva is a great general-purpose design tool, but it has no knowledge of Amazon KDP's technical requirements. When you create a "book cover" in Canva, you're designing a front cover only. KDP paperbacks and hardcovers require a full wraparound cover โ front, spine, and back โ as a single PDF with exact dimensions that depend on your page count, paper type, and trim size.
This means in Canva you need to manually calculate your spine width, manually set the canvas to the correct pixel dimensions, manually position your spine text, manually add bleed margins, and manually verify everything is at 300 DPI. Get any of these wrong and Amazon rejects your file.
What KDP CoverLab does differently
KDP CoverLab Pro is built specifically for Amazon KDP. You enter your page count, select your paper type and trim size, and the tool calculates every dimension automatically โ spine width, total cover width, bleed zones, safe zones, and pixel dimensions at 300 DPI. The live template overlay shows you exactly where KDP's boundaries are while you design.
When you export, you get a single PDF (or PNG, JPEG, TIFF) that matches KDP's specifications exactly. No manual math, no rejected uploads, no guessing.
When Canva is the better choice
If you only need an eBook cover (front only, no spine or wraparound), Canva works fine. It's also better for marketing materials like social media graphics, ad creatives, and bookmarks. And if you're already a Canva Pro subscriber using it for other design work, the marginal cost of also using it for simple eBook covers is zero.
But the moment you need a paperback or hardcover cover that will pass Amazon's dimension checks on the first upload, a KDP-specific tool saves you hours of frustration.
Use Canva for eBook covers and marketing graphics. Use KDP CoverLab Pro for paperback and hardcover wraparound covers where KDP's technical specs matter. Most serious KDP publishers end up using both.
Frequently Asked Questions
Try KDP CoverLab Pro free
Design your cover, preview it with KDP's exact specs, and export when you're ready. No credit card required.
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