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How to Read More Books: 15 Practical Strategies That Actually Work (2026)

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You want to read more books. You have said it every January, bought books that sit untouched, and watched your screen time report with guilt. You are not lazy and you are not too busy. The problem is almost never a lack of time — it is a lack of strategy. The average Indian spends 3–4 hours daily on their smartphone. Reclaiming just 15 minutes of that for reading adds up to 20+ books per year.

This guide covers how to read more books using 15 practical, tested strategies — from the simple math of 15 minutes a day to habit stacking, audiobook integration, reading environment design, and a 30-day challenge to kickstart the habit. No motivational speeches. Just systems that work.

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Note: Strategies in this guide are based on habit-formation research (James Clear’s Atomic Habits), reading speed data from Staples and the Journal of Memory and Language, and practical techniques from prolific readers. Last reviewed: May 2026.
📌 Key Takeaways
  • 15 minutes of daily reading = 20+ books per year (at average reading speed) The #1 barrier is not time — it is phone distraction. Replace 15 min of scrolling with reading. Habit stacking (reading + existing routine) is the most reliable way to build a reading habit Audiobooks count. Ebooks count. The format does not matter — consistency does. It is okay to quit a book you are not enjoying — the sunk cost fallacy kills reading habits Carry a book everywhere — the best reading happens in unexpected free moments

How to Read More Books: The Simple Math Most People Miss

Before jumping to strategies, let us look at the actual numbers. Understanding this math is the foundation of learning how to read more books without finding extra hours in your day.

Daily Reading TimePages/Day (~250 wpm)Books/Year (~250 pages avg)
10 minutes~10 pages~14 books/year
15 minutes~15 pages~22 books/year
20 minutes~20 pages~29 books/year
30 minutes~30 pages~44 books/year
1 hour~60 pages~88 books/year

Just 15 minutes of daily reading — the time it takes to drink a cup of chai — adds up to 22 books per year. That is more than 90% of Indian adults read. You do not need hours of free time. You need 15 minutes and consistency. This is how to read 20 books a year without changing your life.

Build a Reading Habit: 8 Strategies That Make Reading Automatic

These 8 strategies are specifically designed to help you build a reading habit that sticks — by making reading the easiest, most natural choice in your daily routine.

1. Start With Just 15 Minutes — Not an Hour

The biggest mistake is setting an ambitious goal (“I’ll read for an hour every night”) that you abandon within a week. Start with 15 minutes. It feels almost too easy — and that is the point. A tiny habit practised daily compounds into 22+ books per year. Once 15 minutes becomes automatic (2–3 weeks), you can gradually extend.

2. Habit Stack: Attach Reading to Something You Already Do

James Clear’s habit stacking formula: “After I [existing habit], I will [read for 15 minutes].” Examples that work for Indian routines:

  • “After I pour my morning chai, I will read for 15 minutes.”
  • “After I sit in the metro/bus for my commute, I will open my book.”
  • “After I get into bed at night, I will read instead of scrolling my phone.”
  • “After I finish lunch, I will read for 10 minutes before returning to work.”
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Tip: The “chai + book” combination is the single most effective reading trigger for Indian readers. Morning chai is already a daily ritual — attaching 15 minutes of reading to it requires zero extra time planning. Make it your anchor habit.

3. Replace Phone Time, Not Sleep Time

Do not try to “find” time to read — replace existing time. The average Indian spends 3–4 hours daily on their smartphone. Replacing just 15 minutes of social media scrolling with reading gives you 22+ books per year without sleeping less, waking earlier, or giving up anything you actually value.

Practical trick: Set your phone’s screen time limit to lock Instagram/YouTube/Twitter 15 minutes earlier than your usual bedtime. Use that reclaimed time for reading. Your phone’s Digital Wellbeing or Screen Time settings make this automatic.

4. Keep a Book Within Arm’s Reach — Always

If a book is always accessible, you will naturally fill idle moments with reading instead of scrolling. Keep a book on your nightstand, in your bag, on your desk, and in your car. Some of the best reading happens in unexpected pockets — waiting rooms, queues, delayed flights, and the 5 minutes before a meeting starts.

5. Design Your Environment for Reading

Behavioural research shows environment design beats willpower every time. Make reading the easiest option and distractions the hardest:

  • Put a book on your pillow every morning so it is the first thing you see at night
  • Charge your phone in another room (not on your nightstand)
  • Create a “reading corner” — a comfortable chair with good lighting and no screens nearby
  • Leave a book open on the kitchen table where you eat breakfast

6. Give Yourself Permission to Quit Books

Not every book deserves to be finished. If a book is not engaging you after 50–100 pages, put it down and start something else. The sunk cost fallacy — feeling obligated to finish because you already invested time — is one of the biggest killers of reading habits. Life is too short for boring books. Quitting a bad book is not failure — it is good curation.

7. Set a “Book, Not Phone” Rule for Specific Times

Choose 1–2 daily moments where the rule is: book, not phone. The most effective slots are:

  • First 15 minutes in bed at night — read instead of doom-scrolling
  • Public transport commute — read instead of social media
  • Waiting anywhere — doctor’s office, restaurant, before meetings

8. Read Multiple Books Simultaneously

Contrary to popular belief, reading 2–3 books at once can actually increase your reading volume. Keep one fiction for bedtime, one non-fiction for morning/commute, and one audiobook for walks/exercise. When you are not in the mood for one genre, you have another waiting. This prevents the “I don’t feel like reading this” excuse from stopping you entirely.

Reading vs Audiobooks vs Ebooks: Which Format Helps You Read More?

A common question when learning how to read more books is whether audiobooks and ebooks “count.” The answer is simple: all formats count. Here is a detailed reading vs audiobooks vs ebooks comparison to help you choose.

FeaturePhysical BooksEbooks (Kindle/App)Audiobooks
Retention⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Best (tactile memory)⭐⭐⭐⭐ Good⭐⭐⭐ Good (varies by attention)
Convenience⭐⭐⭐ Carry one at a time⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Thousands on one device⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Hands-free, eyes-free
Best timeDedicated reading timeCommute, travel, bedWalking, driving, cooking, gym
Cost (India)₹200–₹600 per book₹100–₹400 (often cheaper)₹200–₹500 or Audible subscription
Eye strainNoneSome (mitigated by e-ink readers)None
Free optionsLibraries, book exchangesLibby, Open Library, Project GutenbergLibby, YouTube, Spotify (limited)
Best forDeep focus, study, non-fictionTravel, bedtime, convenienceCommute, exercise, multitasking

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Tip: The biggest volume hack for reading is adding audiobooks to your routine. Walking (30 min), commuting (1 hour), cooking (30 min), and exercising (30 min) are all “dead time” where physical reading is impossible — but audiobooks work perfectly. Adding audiobooks alone can double your book count.

Best Reading Apps India: Free and Paid Tools to Read More Books

The right app can make the difference between a reading goal and a reading habit. Here are the best reading apps India readers can use in 2026.

AppTypeCostBest For
Kindle AppEbook readingFree app + buy books (₹99–₹499)Largest ebook store, highlights, sync across devices
LibbyFree ebooks + audiobooksFree (with library card)Borrow ebooks/audiobooks from public libraries — 100% free
AudibleAudiobooks₹199/month (1 credit)Best audiobook library, Indian narrators available
Google Play BooksEbook + audiobookFree app + buy booksGood alternative to Kindle, integrates with Google ecosystem
GoodreadsReading trackerFreeTrack books, set annual goals, discover recommendations, join communities
BooklyReading tracker + timerFree (premium optional)Track reading time, pages, set daily goals with stats
Open LibraryFree ebooksFreeBorrow from 1M+ ebook library — no cost
PocketArticle saverFreeSave long-form articles for later reading (not books)

Libby is the most underrated reading app in India. If your city has a public library system (many do — Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Chennai), you can borrow ebooks and audiobooks completely free through Libby. It is like Netflix for books — free, legal, and surprisingly well-stocked.

How to Read More Books: 30-Day Reading Challenge

This 30-day plan builds your reading habit gradually — the same way you would build a reading habit with any other skill.

WeekDaily TargetStrategyExpected Result
Week 1 (Days 1–7)10 minutesRead during morning chai or before bed. Phone in another room.~70 pages total — habit anchor established
Week 2 (Days 8–14)15 minutesAdd audiobook during one daily activity (commute/walk/cooking).~150 pages total — first book almost done
Week 3 (Days 15–21)20 minutesReplace one phone-scrolling session with reading. Track on Goodreads.~300 pages — first book completed
Week 4 (Days 22–30)20–30 minutesStart second book. The habit now feels natural — reading is your default.1 book finished, 2nd underway — on pace for 20+/year

Read 20 Books a Year: The Specific System

If your goal is to read 20 books a year, here is the exact system — reverse-engineered from the math:

  • Target: 20 books/year = ~1.7 books/month = ~55 pages/week = ~8 pages/day
  • Time needed: 8 pages/day at average reading speed = ~10 minutes daily
  • Format split: Read 12 physical/ebooks + listen to 8 audiobooks. Audiobooks are faster (1.25–1.5x speed) and fill dead time.
  • Book selection: Alternate between light reads (200 pages) and dense reads (400+ pages) to maintain momentum
  • Tracking: Use Goodreads “Reading Challenge” — set 20 books, update as you finish each one
  • Monthly rhythm: Finish 1 book in first 2 weeks + start next immediately. Never have a gap between books — momentum is everything.
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Tip: The secret to reading 20+ books a year is never having a gap between books. The moment you finish one, start the next immediately — even if it is just the first chapter. The gap between books is where reading habits go to die.

7 Mistakes That Kill Your Reading Habit

1. Setting a Goal Too High

“I’ll read for 2 hours every day” is a guaranteed failure. Start with 10–15 minutes. Build consistency first, duration second.

2. Forcing Yourself to Finish Every Book

The sunk cost fallacy — “I’ve already read 100 pages, I can’t quit now” — kills more reading habits than anything else. Quit bad books. Read good ones. Life is short.

3. Only Reading Physical Books

If you limit yourself to physical books, you miss 2–3 hours of daily “dead time” (commutes, walks, exercise, cooking) where audiobooks work perfectly. Format snobbery reduces reading volume.

4. Reading Only Before Bed When You Are Already Exhausted

Reading 2 pages before falling asleep does not build a habit. Find a time when you are alert — morning chai, lunch break, commute — and make that your primary reading slot. Bedtime reading is a bonus, not the foundation.

5. Not Tracking What You Read

Without tracking, you lose the satisfaction of progress. A Goodreads list or simple spreadsheet creates visible momentum that motivates continued reading.

6. Choosing Books You “Should” Read Instead of Books You Want to Read

Reading classics or “important” books you find boring is a fast way to hate reading. Start with books that genuinely excite you — thrillers, fantasy, self-help, biographies, whatever. Enjoyment builds the habit; diversification comes later.

7. Keeping Your Phone on Your Nightstand

If your phone is within reach at bedtime, you will scroll instead of read. Charge it in another room. Put a book on your pillow instead. Environment design beats willpower.

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Warning: The biggest enemy of a reading habit in 2026 is not a lack of time — it is the smartphone. The average phone pickup takes 4 minutes; 15 pickups equals a full hour lost. Reducing phone use by just 15 minutes daily gives you 22 books per year. That is not a trade-off — it is a massive upgrade.

Not Sure What to Read? Starter Picks by Genre

  • Fiction (Indian): The White Tiger (Aravind Adiga), A Suitable Boy (Vikram Seth), The God of Small Things (Arundhati Roy)
  • Fiction (International): Atomic Habits… wait, that’s non-fiction — Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari bridges both worlds beautifully
  • Self-improvement: Atomic Habits (James Clear), Deep Work (Cal Newport), The Psychology of Money (Morgan Housel)
  • Science: A Short History of Nearly Everything (Bill Bryson), Sapiens (Yuval Noah Harari)
  • Thriller: The Girl on the Train (Paula Hawkins), Gone Girl (Gillian Flynn)
  • Biography: Wings of Fire (APJ Abdul Kalam), Steve Jobs (Walter Isaacson)
  • Short reads (under 200 pages): The Alchemist (Paulo Coelho), Who Moved My Cheese (Spencer Johnson), Ikigai (Héctor García)

For more on building productive habits, read our How to Build a Sustainable Morning Routine. And for evidence-based focus techniques to make your reading time more effective, check our 15 Productivity Techniques Backed by Science. To reduce phone distractions that compete with reading time, see our Digital Declutter Guide.

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Note: Reading recommendations are personal opinions based on popular picks. Book availability and pricing vary. App features may change. All strategies are based on habit-formation research and practical experience.
Frequently Asked Questions
How can I read more books when I am busy?

You do not need extra time — replace 15 minutes of daily phone scrolling with reading. That equals 22+ books per year. Add audiobooks during commutes, walks, and exercise to double the count. The barrier is not time — it is distraction.

How many books can I read in a year with just 15 minutes a day?

At average reading speed (~250 words per minute), 15 minutes daily equals approximately 15 pages. Over a year, that adds up to ~22 books of average length (250 pages). Increase to 30 minutes and you reach 44 books.

Do audiobooks count as reading?

Yes. Research shows that audiobook comprehension is comparable to visual reading for most content types. Audiobooks are particularly valuable during "dead time" — commuting, walking, cooking, exercising — when physical reading is impossible. Format does not matter; consistency does.

How do I build a reading habit that sticks?

Use habit stacking: attach reading to an existing daily routine ("After my morning chai, I read for 15 minutes"). Start with just 10–15 minutes. Keep a book within arm's reach at all times. Charge your phone in another room at night. Track your reading on Goodreads for visible progress.

What are the best free reading apps in India?

Kindle app (free app, buy books), Libby (free ebooks/audiobooks from libraries), Open Library (1M+ free ebooks), Google Play Books, and Goodreads (tracking + recommendations). For audiobooks, Libby and YouTube offer free options.

Should I force myself to finish books I don't enjoy?

No. Quit books that are not engaging after 50–100 pages. The sunk cost fallacy kills reading habits. Your time is better spent on a book you enjoy than grinding through one you hate. Quitting is good curation, not failure.

What is the best time of day to read?

Whenever you are most alert and least likely to be interrupted. For most people: morning chai time, lunch break, or commute. Bedtime reading is popular but less effective if you are already exhausted. Find YOUR best slot and protect it.

How do I read 20 books a year?

Read just 8 pages per day (10 minutes) consistently. Use audiobooks for dead time (commute, exercise). Never leave a gap between books — start the next one immediately after finishing. Track progress on Goodreads. Alternate light reads with dense ones. The math works out to 20+ books per year.

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