Getting ISBNs for 1,194 Books in India: What We Learned
India provides free ISBNs to registered publishers. Here is the process, the timeline, and the lessons from registering over a thousand titles.
Why ISBNs Matter
An ISBN is not just a number. It is the book's passport — the identifier that allows it to exist in library catalogs, bookstore databases, and international distribution systems.
Without an ISBN, a book is invisible to institutional buyers. With one, it enters a global system of discoverability.
The Indian ISBN System
India's ISBN agency — the Raja Rammohun Roy National Agency for ISBN — provides ISBNs free of charge to registered publishers. This is a significant advantage over markets like the United States, where each ISBN costs $125 individually (or $295 for 10).
The process:
- Register as a publisher with the ISBN agency
- Submit a publisher application with supporting documents
- Receive a publisher prefix (ours is part of the 978-93 block for India)
- Request ISBNs in batches — each book gets a unique 13-digit number
What We Did
We registered ISBNs for the full catalog of 1,194 titles. This includes:
- 68 published books with full text available online
- 1,126 catalog-only titles with metadata (title, genre, word count, year)
Every ISBN follows the standard structure:
- 978 (book prefix)
- 93 (India group)
- Publisher prefix (assigned to The Book Nexus)
- Title number (unique per book)
- Check digit (calculated)
The Lessons
- Apply early: Processing times can vary. We applied months before we needed the ISBNs.
- Batch requests work: The agency handles large batch requests. 1,194 ISBNs was not a problem.
- Metadata matters: Each ISBN registration requires accurate metadata — title, author, language, format, subject classification. Getting this right upfront saves correction headaches later.
- Free doesn't mean effortless: The ISBNs are free, but the administrative work of registering 1,194 titles correctly is substantial.
The Result
Every book in our catalog has an ISBN. Every book page carries its ISBN in the metadata, in the schema markup, and in the export formats (BibTeX, RIS, CSV). This is basic publishing infrastructure that most independent publishers skip.
We didn't skip it. At 1,194 titles, we couldn't afford to.
— The Book Nexus OperationsThe Book Nexus
Independent Publisher, Pune, India