If you have ever wondered how your reading speed compares to everyone else, you have probably been told the average is 300 words per minute. That number is wrong. The real average, drawn from a meta-analysis of 190 studies covering nearly 18,000 participants, is closer to 238 words per minute for non-fiction reading. Here is what the research actually says, broken down by format, age, and reading style, and why the answer matters.
Key takeaways
- The average adult reads 238 words per minute for non-fiction prose, based on Brysbaert’s 2019 meta-analysis of 190 studies and 17,887 participants.
- Fiction is read about 10% faster than non-fiction, averaging 260 WPM. Reading aloud drops sharply to 183 WPM.
- The widely-quoted “300 WPM average” came from outdated and limited research. The 238 WPM figure is the most authoritative number in the field.
- Age and education matter. College-educated adults average closer to 300 WPM. Children read at 100 to 180 WPM depending on age.
- Reading speed and reading comprehension are not the same thing. True comprehension typically caps out at 400 to 500 WPM for most adults.
- Neurodivergent readers (dyslexia, ADHD) often read at meaningfully different speeds. This is not a deficit; it is a difference that the right tools can help support.
What is the average reading speed?
The average adult silent reading speed for general non-fiction is approximately 238 words per minute. This figure comes from Marc Brysbaert’s 2019 meta-analysis published in the Journal of Memory and Language (volume 109, Article 104047), which reviewed 190 separate studies conducted between 1901 and 2019, involving 17,887 participants in total. It is the most rigorous and widely-cited reading speed figure in modern cognitive science.
For decades, the commonly-quoted average was 300 WPM. This number appeared in speed-reading courses, school textbooks, and countless productivity blogs. But it was never properly validated. Brysbaert’s review found that earlier estimates relied on small samples, inconsistent methodology, and tasks that did not reflect normal reading. When the data is properly aggregated across two decades of research, the true average is meaningfully lower.
Reading speed varies based on what you are reading, why you are reading it, and how. Fiction is typically read about 10% faster than non-fiction; Brysbaert’s data puts it at roughly 260 WPM. Reading aloud is much slower, capped by the speed of speech articulation at around 183 WPM. And if you are skimming for specific information rather than reading for comprehension, even untrained readers can hit 400 to 500 WPM, though understanding drops sharply beyond that point.
Why the 300 WPM myth lasted so long
The 300 WPM figure entered popular consciousness through speed-reading courses in the mid-twentieth century. It was repeated so often that it became received wisdom, appearing in academic papers, school curricula, and self-improvement books without ever being properly verified. The figure was attractive because it was clean, memorable, and made people feel they should be reading faster than they actually were.
Brysbaert’s contribution was not to invent a new way of measuring reading. It was to do the methodical work of gathering every published study on reading rates and aggregating them properly. He found that earlier estimates came from biased samples (often college students reading specifically-prepared texts under test conditions) that did not represent how most adults read most material in real life. Once the data was properly weighted, the true average emerged.
This matters for anyone trying to improve their reading. If you have been measuring yourself against an inflated benchmark, you may have concluded you read slowly when you actually read at a perfectly normal pace. The honest baseline is 238 WPM. Anything meaningfully above that is fast. Anything below is not a problem unless comprehension is also suffering.
Reading speed by format
Different reading formats produce reliably different speeds. The differences are large enough that comparing your speed without specifying the format gives misleading results. The numbers below show what the research finds across each major format.
| Format | Typical speed | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Non-fiction (silent) | 238 WPM | Baseline average from Brysbaert’s meta-analysis |
| Fiction (silent) | 260 WPM | About 10% faster than non-fiction; shorter words |
| Reading aloud | 183 WPM | Capped by speech articulation speed |
| Skimming for information | 400 to 700 WPM | Comprehension drops sharply |
| Audiobook narration | 150 to 200 WPM | Slower than silent reading by design |
| Subvocalised reading | ~240 WPM ceiling | Limited by internal articulation rate |
The fiction-vs-non-fiction gap has a specific cause. Brysbaert showed that fiction texts use shorter average word lengths (4.2 letters versus 4.6 for non-fiction). When you account for word length, the underlying processing speed is roughly identical. Your brain is doing the same work, just on lighter material. This is why a long technical paper feels like harder work than a novel of the same length.
Reading speed by age and education
Reading speed develops gradually through childhood and adolescence, plateaus in early adulthood, and may decline slightly in older age. Education level matters too. People who read more, read faster.
| Age group | Typical range |
|---|---|
| Ages 6 to 7 (Year 2) | 53 to 111 WPM (huge variation as reading develops) |
| Ages 8 to 9 (Year 4) | 106 to 143 WPM |
| Ages 10 to 11 (Year 6) | 129 to 162 WPM |
| Ages 12 to 14 (Years 7 to 9) | 150 to 204 WPM |
| Ages 15 to 17 (Years 10 to 12) | 180 to 237 WPM |
| Adults (general) | 238 WPM (Brysbaert baseline) |
| College-educated adults | ~300 WPM |
| Highly trained readers | 400 to 500 WPM with comprehension |
Children’s figures come from US and UK oral reading fluency norms, which are the gold standard for measuring developing readers. Adult figures come from silent reading studies. The gap between adolescent and adult speeds is smaller than people often assume. Most of the development happens before age 17, with reading speed largely stabilising in early adulthood unless deliberately trained.
What about neurodivergent readers?
The 238 WPM average does not apply uniformly to everyone. Readers with dyslexia, ADHD, or other forms of neurodivergence often read at meaningfully different speeds, and crucially, the comparison should not be framed as a deficit. Different brains read differently, and the right tools can dramatically narrow or eliminate the gap.
Research on screen-based reading shows that adults with diagnosed dyslexia average around 212 to 222 WPM compared to 320 to 330 WPM for non-dyslexic adults reading the same material. The gap closes meaningfully with the right typography (larger spacing, dyslexia-friendly fonts) and reading mode (single-word presentation, reduced visual crowding). Adult dyslexic readers tested in Italian university samples also showed slower speed but normal accuracy. They were reading correctly, just deliberately.
For ADHD readers, the issue is not usually speed itself. It is sustained attention. Many ADHD adults can read at or above the 238 WPM average for short bursts but struggle to maintain that pace across longer texts. The visual complexity of a full page of text competes for limited attentional resources. Reading modes that present one word at a time (RSVP) or that bold the start of each word (Bold Flow) can help by reducing the cognitive load of tracking position and finding the next word. The Moussaoui et al. 2025 study found a 13% comprehension advantage for ADHD readers using RSVP compared to traditional reading, which is the most rigorous evidence we have for this approach so far.
Reading speed vs reading comprehension
Speed without comprehension is not reading; it is word recognition. Any honest discussion of reading speed has to address the trade-off, because it is the single most important thing to understand about your own reading.
For most adults, comprehension stays roughly stable between 200 and 400 WPM. Below 200, you are reading slowly enough that you are probably re-reading words unnecessarily. Above 400, comprehension begins to degrade for most people on most texts. By 600 to 700 WPM, you are essentially skimming, picking up roughly 50% of what you read. By 1,000 WPM and above, what is actually happening is selective reading: your eyes are landing on a small subset of words and your brain is filling in the rest from context.
This is why claims of “read 1,000 WPM with full comprehension” should be treated sceptically. The research is consistent: above 400 to 500 WPM, you can either read for understanding or read for speed, but not both. What this gets at is that not every text needs deep comprehension. A novel for pleasure can be read at 300 WPM. A news article you are scanning for one fact can be read at 600 WPM. A textbook chapter you will be tested on needs to be read at 200 to 250 WPM with breaks. Choosing the right speed for the right material is what real reading skill looks like.
How to find out your own reading speed
The numbers above are population averages. Yours might be higher or lower, and the only way to know is to measure it on a real text under realistic conditions. The basic methodology is simple: pick a passage of about 250 words from a book you would normally read, time yourself reading it normally, then divide the word count by the time in seconds and multiply by 60. The result is your WPM.
The tricky part is making the test fair. Reading a passage you have already read inflates the result. Reading a passage that is much easier or harder than your normal material distorts it. Reading without a comprehension check means you cannot tell if you are really reading or just glancing at words. A proper reading speed test controls for all three: it uses an unfamiliar passage of standard difficulty and asks comprehension questions afterwards.
Find out your own reading speed in two minutes
The Accruva reading speed test uses a standard passage and a comprehension check, so you get an honest result rather than an inflated one. It is free, takes about two minutes, and shows you exactly where you sit on the WPM scale.
Test my reading speedFrequently asked questions
Is 200 WPM slow for an adult?
What is a good reading speed for a student?
Can you really read 1,000 WPM?
Why is my reading speed different on screen versus paper?
Does reading speed decline with age?
Can speed reading apps actually make you read faster?
What is the average reading speed in the UK specifically?
Where this leaves you
The honest average reading speed for adults is 238 WPM for non-fiction, 260 WPM for fiction, and 183 WPM aloud. Most of the higher numbers you will see online (300 WPM, 400 WPM) are either outdated, drawn from biased samples, or describe skimming rather than reading. Knowing your own speed is genuinely useful, but only when measured properly, on real material, with a comprehension check.
If you would like to find out where you sit on the scale, the Accruva reading speed test takes about two minutes. If you would rather understand the underlying science of how reading actually works, our science page goes deeper into the cognitive mechanics. And if you are a neurodivergent reader looking for tools designed with you in mind, our accessibility approach explains how Accruva’s reading modes are built differently from the rest of the speed-reading market.
Sources: Brysbaert, M. (2019). How many words do we read per minute? A review and meta-analysis of reading rate. Journal of Memory and Language, 109, Article 104047. Hasbrouck, J. & Tindal, G. (2017). An update to compiled ORF norms (Technical Report No. 1702). Behavioral Research and Teaching, University of Oregon. Kuperman, V., Matsuki, K. & Van Dyke, J. A. (2018). Contributions of reader- and text-level characteristics to eye-movement patterns during passage reading. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 44(11), 1687 to 1713.
The honest version of reading speed is this: most adults read at around 238 WPM, the 300 WPM figure was wrong from the start, and your own number only means something when you measure it properly. That is the whole story, and it is more useful than any speed-reading promise you will see this year.
Ross Proudfoot, founder of Accruva
Find out where you actually sit on the WPM scale
The Accruva reading speed test uses a standard passage and a comprehension check, so the number you get is the number that matters. Free, two minutes, no signup.
