How to Calculate Your Reading Speed
Reading speed is measured in Words Per Minute (WPM) and represents how quickly you can read and comprehend written text. Understanding your reading speed helps you plan study time, estimate reading schedules, and track improvement over time.
Simple Reading Speed Formula
Example: 600 words ÷ 3 minutes = 200 WPM
Step-by-Step Reading Speed Test
- Choose appropriate text: Select a passage of 200-500 words at your reading level
- Count the words: Use our word counter tool to get an exact count
- Set up timing: Prepare a stopwatch or timer
- Read naturally: Read at your normal pace, focusing on comprehension
- Stop timing: Note the exact time when you finish
- Calculate WPM: Divide total words by minutes (convert seconds to decimal minutes)
- Test comprehension: Answer 3-5 questions about what you read
⚠️ Important: Comprehension Matters
Reading speed is only meaningful if you understand what you read. If your comprehension drops below 70%, your reading speed may be too fast. Always balance speed with understanding.
Factors Affecting Reading Speed
Text-Related Factors
- Text complexity: Technical content is slower than casual reading
- Font size and type: Smaller or unusual fonts slow reading
- Text layout: Dense paragraphs vs. well-spaced text
- Familiarity: Known topics read faster than unfamiliar subjects
- Language level: Vocabulary difficulty impacts speed
Reader-Related Factors
- Reading experience: More practice leads to faster reading
- Vocabulary size: Larger vocabulary improves speed
- Eye movement: Fewer fixations and regressions increase speed
- Concentration level: Focus affects both speed and comprehension
- Reading purpose: Scanning vs. detailed study reading
- Fatigue and environment: Physical condition and surroundings matter
Proven Techniques to Improve Reading Speed
1. Eliminate Subvocalization
What it is: The habit of "hearing" words in your head while reading
Why it slows you down: Limits reading speed to speaking speed (150-250 WPM)
How to overcome it:
- Hum or chew gum while reading
- Occupy your mouth with counting or saying "la-la-la"
- Focus on visualizing concepts instead of hearing words
- Practice reading faster than you can speak
2. Reduce Eye Movements
Goal: Read groups of words instead of individual words
Techniques:
- Use a pacer: Finger, pen, or cursor to guide eyes
- Expand peripheral vision: See entire phrases at once
- Minimize regressions: Avoid re-reading unless necessary
- Fixed-point reading: Focus on center of text blocks
3. Skimming and Scanning Strategies
Skimming (General Ideas)
- • Read headings and subheadings
- • First and last sentences of paragraphs
- • Key words and phrases
- • Charts, graphs, and captions
Scanning (Specific Information)
- • Look for specific keywords
- • Use ctrl+F for digital text
- • Focus on numbers, dates, names
- • Skip irrelevant sections
4. Build Your Vocabulary
A larger vocabulary directly improves reading speed because you spend less time decoding unfamiliar words:
- Read diverse materials: Expand beyond your comfort zone
- Use context clues: Infer meaning before looking up words
- Keep a vocabulary journal: Record and review new words
- Use flashcards or apps: Spaced repetition for retention
Reading Speed Training Exercises
Daily Practice Routine
15-Minute Speed Reading Workout
Minutes 1-5: Warm-up
- • Easy material
- • Normal pace
- • Focus on comprehension
Minutes 6-10: Speed Push
- • Read 25% faster than comfortable
- • Use finger pacing
- • Don't worry about perfect comprehension
Minutes 11-15: Comprehension Check
- • Read at new comfortable speed
- • Test understanding
- • Track improvement
Progressive Training Plan
| Week | Goal WPM | Practice Focus | Daily Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-2 | +20% baseline | Eliminate subvocalization | 15 minutes |
| 3-4 | +40% baseline | Pacing techniques | 20 minutes |
| 5-8 | +60% baseline | Chunking and peripheral vision | 25 minutes |
| 9-12 | +80% baseline | Advanced skimming/scanning | 30 minutes |
Digital Reading vs. Print Reading
Speed Differences
📖 Print Reading
- Advantages:
- • 10-30% faster than digital
- • Better comprehension retention
- • Less eye strain
- • Easier to navigate
- Average speed: 250-300 WPM
💻 Digital Reading
- Advantages:
- • Searchable content
- • Adjustable font size
- • Built-in tools (dictionary, etc.)
- • Portable library
- Average speed: 200-250 WPM
Optimizing Digital Reading
- Adjust display settings: Increase font size, adjust brightness
- Use dark mode: Reduces eye strain in low light
- Take regular breaks: 20-20-20 rule (every 20 minutes, look 20 feet away for 20 seconds)
- Eliminate distractions: Close other tabs and notifications
- Use reading apps: Dedicated readers often perform better than browsers
Measuring Progress and Setting Goals
Tracking Your Improvement
Keep a reading log to monitor your progress:
- Weekly speed tests: Same conditions, similar text difficulty
- Comprehension scores: Track understanding, not just speed
- Reading time logs: How long different materials take
- Comfort level notes: How does faster reading feel?
🎯 Realistic Improvement Goals
- Beginner (under 200 WPM): Aim for 250-300 WPM in 3 months
- Average (200-300 WPM): Reach 350-400 WPM in 3-6 months
- Good (300-400 WPM): Achieve 450-500 WPM with focused practice
- Advanced (400+ WPM): Specialize in specific speed reading techniques
When to Focus on Speed vs. Comprehension
Prioritize Comprehension
- • Academic studying
- • Technical documentation
- • Legal or medical texts
- • Complex research papers
- • Poetry or literature analysis
Prioritize Speed
- • Email and casual reading
- • News articles and blogs
- • Research and fact-finding
- • Entertainment reading
- • Familiar subject matter
Ready to Test Your Reading Speed?
Use our word counter to measure text length for accurate reading speed calculations!