Why Is a Piece of Paper 8.5 by 11 Inches?

  • Papermaking, 1809
Papermaking, 1809
Credit: © Science & Society Picture Library—SSPL/Getty Images
Author Bess Lovejoy

March 19, 2026

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If you’ve ever wandered the aisles of an office supply store, you may have noticed something curious: For all the different pens, folders, and desk gadgets on display, paper doesn’t offer much in the way of variety. In the United States, the go-to sheet of printer paper is 8.5 inches wide and 11 inches long, and it has been for decades. So who made that call?

Credit: © Hulton Archive/Getty Images

The answer goes back to the 1600s, when Dutch papermakers used wooden molds to form sheets of paper from big vats of watery pulp. The molds had to be big enough for the vatman — the worker handling the frame — to lift and shake comfortably. Through trial and error, papermakers settled on molds roughly 44 inches long, the average span of a worker’s outstretched arms. When that large sheet was quartered, the resulting pieces measured about 11 inches on their long side.

The origin of the width is less certain, but historians point to the molds’ original 17-inch dimension. Halved, that produced the familiar 8.5-inch width. In other words, the size of the modern office memo may be the legacy of how far a 17th-century worker could stretch their arms.

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