The Ultimate Guide to Professional Screenplay Formatting
First impressions matter. A poorly formatted screenplay signals amateur hour to Hollywood gatekeepers. Here's everything you need to know about industry-standard formatting.
📏 The Sacred Rules of Page Layout
The Only Acceptable Font
12-point Courier (or Courier New / Courier Prime)
Why? Courier is a monospaced font where every character takes the same width. This ensures:
- Consistent page count - One page ≈ one minute of screen time
- Easy reading - Wider character spacing reduces eye strain
- Industry tradition - Everyone uses it, so should you
Never use: Arial, Times New Roman, Helvetica, or any other font. Seriously. Your script will be rejected unread.
Margins That Matter
Top: 1.0 inch
Bottom: 0.5 - 1.0 inch (varies by software)
Left: 1.5 inches (for binding holes)
Right: 1.0 inch
Why the wide left margin? Scripts are hole-punched and bound with brass fasteners. The extra space prevents text from disappearing into the binding.
🎬 Element Formatting Rules
Scene Headings (Sluglines)
INT. COFFEE SHOP - DAY
Anatomy:
- INT. or EXT. - Interior or Exterior
- Location - Specific place (all caps)
- Time of day - DAY, NIGHT, MORNING, SUNSET, etc.
Margin: Flush left, 1.5 inches from page edge
Common mistakes:
- ❌
(should be all caps)Int. Coffee Shop - Day - ❌
(wrong order)COFFEE SHOP - INT - DAY - ❌
(too specific; use AFTERNOON)INT. COFFEE SHOP - 3PM
Action (Description)
SARAH, 30s, exhausted, slumps into a booth. Her phone BUZZES.
She ignores it.
Rules:
- Margin: Flush left to right margin
- Tense: Always present tense
- Character introductions: ALL CAPS on first mention, include age
- Sound effects: ALL CAPS (optional)
- White space: Break into short paragraphs (4 lines max)
Pro tip: Action is film language, not prose. Write what the camera sees, not what characters think.
Character Names
SARAH
Margin: Centered at 3.7 inches from left edge
Extensions:
- (V.O.) - Voice over (narration)
- (O.S.) - Off-screen (in the scene but not visible)
- (CONT'D) - Continuing dialogue after action break
Examples:
SARAH (V.O.)
I should've stayed in bed.
SARAH (CONT'D)
But here I am.
Dialogue
SARAH
I can't believe you did that.
Margin: 2.5 inches from left, 2.5 inches from right (narrower than action)
Why narrower? Creates visual distinction on the page. Producers can instantly see dialogue-heavy vs. action-heavy scripts.
Parentheticals
SARAH
(under her breath)
Idiot.
Margin: 3.1 inches from left
Purpose: Brief character direction (emotion, delivery, physical action)
Rules:
- Keep it short - 2-3 words max
- Use sparingly - Actors hate being told how to act
- Never use for scene action - That belongs in action lines
Good parentheticals:
(whispers)
- Brief pause(beat)
- Who they're addressing(to John)(laughs)
Bad parentheticals:
- Too long(angrily, because he just found out she lied)
- This is action, not a parenthetical(stands up and walks to the door)
Transitions
CUT TO:
FADE OUT.
Margin: Flush right
When to use:
- CUT TO: - Only for emphasis (modern scripts omit this)
- FADE OUT. - Only at the end of the script
- DISSOLVE TO: - Time passage
- MATCH CUT TO: - Visual connection between scenes
Pro tip: Most transitions are implied. Don't write
CUT TO: between every scene—it's assumed.
📄 Page Numbering
Where Numbers Go
- Top-right corner
- 0.5 inches from top
- Followed by a period:
23.
When to Start Numbering
- Page 1: Title page (no number shown)
- Page 2: First page of script (number shown)
Locked Pages (Production Scripts)
During shooting, pages get "locked" to preserve continuity:
23.
23A.
23B.
If scenes are added, they become A, B, C pages instead of renumbering everything.
🎨 Advanced Formatting Techniques
Montage
MONTAGE - SARAH'S TRAINING
A) Sarah runs through the park at dawn.
B) Sarah practices punches in a gym.
C) Sarah studies fight footage on her laptop.
END MONTAGE
Intercut (Cross-Cutting Between Scenes)
INTERCUT - PHONE CONVERSATION
INT. SARAH'S APARTMENT - NIGHT
Sarah paces nervously.
SARAH
We need to talk.
INT. JOHN'S CAR - NIGHT
John grips the steering wheel.
JOHN
Not now.
Flashback
FLASHBACK:
INT. CHILDHOOD HOME - DAY (1995)
Young Sarah, 8, watches her parents argue.
BACK TO PRESENT
📊 Page Count Guidelines
Feature Films
| Genre | Typical Page Count |
|---|---|
| Comedy | 90-100 pages |
| Drama | 100-120 pages |
| Action | 110-130 pages |
| Thriller | 100-110 pages |
Why the variation? Action scripts have more white space (chase scenes, fights) and thus more pages for the same runtime.
Television
| Format | Page Count |
|---|---|
| 30-min sitcom | 25-35 pages |
| 1-hour drama | 50-60 pages |
| Streaming (no commercials) | 55-65 pages |
🚫 Common Formatting Sins
Sin #1: Camera Directions
❌ The CAMERA PANS to reveal a dead body.
✅ A dead body lies in the corner.
Why? You're the writer, not the director. Describe what we see, not how we see it.
Exceptions: When the camera move is story-critical:
✅ REVERSE ANGLE - The killer stands behind Sarah.
Sin #2: Overly Detailed Action
❌ Sarah walks across the room, her hand trembling as she
reaches for the doorknob. She hesitates, takes a deep
breath, and slowly turns the knob counterclockwise.
✅ Sarah approaches the door, hand trembling. She opens it.
Why? Screenplays are blueprints, not novels. Trust the director and actor to fill in details.
Sin #3: Dialogue Formatting in Action
❌ Sarah says "I love you" to John.
✅ SARAH
I love you.
Why? Dialogue always goes in dialogue format, never in action paragraphs.
Sin #4: Underlining/Bold/Italics
❌ Sarah is *really* angry.
✅ Sarah SLAMS her fist on the table.
Why? Screenplay formatting doesn't support emphasis beyond ALL CAPS for sounds and first character appearances.
💡 Pro Tips from the Trenches
Tip #1: Use Proper Screenplay Software
Recommended tools:
- Final Draft - Industry standard ($249)
- Laper - Modern, collaborative, AI-powered (free tier available)
- WriterDuet - Cloud-based, real-time collaboration (free tier)
- Highland 2 - Minimalist, Fountain-based (free)
Why? These tools auto-format as you type. You'll never need to manually adjust margins.
Tip #2: Read Professional Scripts
Download scripts from:
- SimplyScripts.com - Free screenplay library
- The Black List - Unproduced gems
- Studio websites - Oscar contenders release scripts during awards season
Study formatting choices in scripts that sold for millions. Notice how lean and visual they are.
Tip #3: The "Skim Test"
Print your first 10 pages. Can someone skim them in 30 seconds and grasp:
- Genre?
- Protagonist?
- Conflict?
If not, you have too much dense description. Add white space.
🎯 Conclusion
Perfect formatting won't sell a bad script, but poor formatting will kill a good one. Master these rules, then forget about them. Focus on storytelling—let software handle the margins.
One-Page Rule: If readers can't get through your first page without confusion, they'll never reach your brilliant plot twist on page 87.
Ready to write? Laper's editor auto-formats everything correctly. Focus on your story—we've got the rest.