Bleed & Safe Zone in Print
Learn what bleed is, why every print job needs it, how much to add per product type, and how to export a print-ready PDF with correct bleed settings.
Bleed & Safe Zone Explained
Bleed is one of the most important concepts in professional printing. Getting it right prevents white-edge defects and rejected files — saving time and money on every order.
Why bleed matters
No industrial cutting machine in the world cuts paper with zero tolerance. Guillotine blades operate under massive pressure that can shift a paper stack by ±1 mm. Bleed is the extra margin that hides this shift so your printed piece looks exactly as designed.
What happens without bleed?
Imagine you order a business card with a solid black background that goes edge-to-edge. After printing, the guillotine cuts the sheet — but if the blade shifts even slightly outward, thin white lines appear along the edges of the card.
Without bleed on NowToPrint:
- Our automated preflight system flags the file as "missing bleed" and asks you to correct it — delaying your order.
- If the file is accepted manually and goes to press, the printed piece will have unwanted white borders.
The three zones: bleed, trim, and safe zone
Every print-ready document has three concentric areas:
Bleed (BleedBox)
Extend all background colours and full-bleed images at least 3 mm beyond the trim edge on every side. For an A4 page (210 × 297 mm), set your document to 216 × 303 mm and fill the extra area.
Trim Line (TrimBox)
This is where the guillotine cuts. The finished product matches this exact size. Everything outside the trim line is discarded after cutting.
Safe Zone
Because the blade can shift inward as well as outward, keep all important content — logos, text, barcodes — at least 5 mm inside the trim edge. This prevents accidental cropping.
Required bleed by product type
| Product | Bleed required | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Business cards / flyers | +3 mm on all sides | Small formats cut in large stacks; standard guillotine tolerance |
| Catalogue / magazine covers | +5 mm on all sides | Binding, stitching, and page bulk cause fold deviations |
| Posters / banners | +10 mm on all sides (minimum) | Large-format roll media requires wider cutting tolerance |
How to add bleed in your design software
When creating a new document (File → New), enter 3 mm in the Bleed field for all four sides. Extend your background colour or image to the red bleed guide that appears outside the page boundary.
Photoshop has no built-in bleed panel. Add 3 mm to each edge manually: for an 85 × 55 mm business card, set your Canvas Size to 91 × 61 mm (3 mm added to each side). After cutting, the finished size will be exactly 85 × 55 mm.
When exporting from Illustrator or InDesign (File → Export → Adobe PDF), open the Marks and Bleeds tab and check Use Document Bleed Settings. This embeds the bleed dimensions in the PDF BleedBox so our preflight engine can read them automatically.
Three common bleed mistakes
- "My background is white, so I don't need bleed." Wrong. Even a white background needs bleed. Without it, the cut line shows as a faint white hairline against your content. Always extend your document to the bleed box, regardless of background colour.
- Defining bleed in settings but not extending artwork. You can set a 3 mm bleed in your document properties, but if your background image or colour still ends at the trim edge, the bleed area is empty — and the problem remains. Drag your background layers to fill the bleed zone.
- Placing critical content too close to the trim edge. If you put text or a logo within 1–2 mm of the trim line, an inward blade shift will clip it. Keep everything important inside the 5 mm safe zone.
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