The independent magazine sector is one of the quiet success stories of the past decade. While general-interest consumer magazines have struggled under the weight of declining advertising and digital competition, a tier of independent titles — beautifully designed, tightly focused, sold directly to readers — has built sustainable, loyal audiences who pay for quality without apology.
Here are twelve titles that represent the best of what independent print publishing can be.
1. Delayed Gratification (UK)
Published quarterly, Delayed Gratification covers the news from the previous three months — after the 24-hour cycle has moved on, the facts have been verified, and context has emerged. The result is journalism that reads more like history than news, produced to exceptional design standards. A direct rebuke to the everything-now model of digital news, and a genuinely better product for it.
2. The Gentlewoman (UK)
A biannual magazine about women who are interesting, published to extraordinary production standards. The photography is genuinely art-directed — not just photographed but conceived — and the writing is long, serious, and treats its subjects and readers as intelligent adults. One of the best-designed magazines currently in print.
3. Kinfolk (Denmark)
Kinfolk almost single-handedly defined an aesthetic vocabulary for the indie magazine boom — slow living, natural materials, contemplative pacing. The early issues were enormously influential on both editorial design and the broader visual culture of the 2010s. Still publishing, still beautiful, now more globally focused.
4. Courier (UK)
Aimed at entrepreneurs and independent business owners, Courier takes seriously the design, culture, and economics of building something outside the corporate mainstream. The interviews are substantive, the production quality is high, and the editorial perspective is genuinely independent from the venture-capital-obsessed startup press.
5. Nautilus (US)
Science journalism that doesn’t condescend. Nautilus publishes original writing at the intersection of science and culture — pieces that take time to develop an idea fully, connect disciplines unexpectedly, and trust readers to follow an argument wherever it leads. Rare and valuable in any medium.
6. Cereal (UK)
A biannual travel and style magazine that takes the slow travel philosophy seriously — fewer destinations, deeper coverage, more time spent understanding a place than listing its attractions. Photographed and designed with exceptional restraint. The paper stock alone is worth the subscription price.
7. Stack (UK)
Technically a subscription service rather than a magazine: each month, Stack curates and delivers a different independent magazine from somewhere in the world. It’s an extraordinary way to encounter publications you’d never find otherwise — from literary journals to specialist design titles to small-run cultural zines.
8. The Sun (US)
Published since 1974, The Sun is an American institution that mainstream publishing has somehow overlooked. Literary, personal, fiercely independent (no advertising), and consistently publishing writing of extraordinary quality. The interviews alone — long, searching conversations about big questions — are worth the subscription.
9. Offscreen (Australia)
A magazine about the humans behind technology, published in an era when most tech coverage is either hype or outrage. Offscreen profiles designers, developers, and thinkers with a seriousness and depth that online coverage rarely achieves. Beautifully printed on excellent paper.
10. Works That Work (Netherlands)
International design journalism with a focus on how design actually functions in the world — not awards and aesthetics, but social impact, cultural context, and the unglamorous work of solving real problems. Sadly now out of print but available in back issues, and essential reading for any designer.
11. Riposte (UK)
A smart magazine about women and work, less interested in celebrity than in the ideas, structures, and cultures that shape working life. Consistently excellent writing and design. Takes its subject seriously in a way that flattery-and-profiles publications don’t.
12. Intern (Australia)
Published biannually out of Melbourne, Intern covers the intersection of work, creativity, and independent life with genuine intelligence and without the aspirational emptiness of much “creative lifestyle” content. Worth seeking out.
How to Find These
Most independent magazines aren’t available at newsstands — distribution is one of the fundamental challenges of independent publishing. Direct subscription through the magazine’s own website is usually the most reliable route and puts the most money in the publisher’s hands. In major cities, specialist magazine shops — like Magma in London or McNally Jackson in New York — often carry a curated independent selection worth exploring in person.