The average adult reads approximately 238 words per minute (WPM) silently. A 1,000-word article takes about 4 minutes; a typical 2,000-word blog post takes roughly 8 minutes.
If you've ever added a "5-min read" label to a blog post or tried to estimate how long a speech will run, you've needed a reliable reading speed figure. The most commonly cited number is 238 WPM — from a 2019 meta-analysis by Brysbaert that averaged results across 190 studies and 17,887 participants.
But averages hide a lot of variation. Your actual reading speed depends on what you're reading, why you're reading it, and how familiar the content is. Here's what the research says.
Reading speed forms a wide bell curve. Most adults fall between 175 and 300 WPM, with the tails extending from struggling readers below 100 WPM to competitive speed readers above 1,000 WPM.
| Reader type | Typical WPM | Time to read 1,000 words | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Struggling reader | 75–125 | 8–13 min | May include readers with dyslexia or limited fluency |
| Below average | 125–175 | 6–8 min | Typical for younger readers or difficult material |
| Average adult | 200–250 | 4–5 min | The 238 WPM benchmark from Brysbaert (2019) |
| Above average | 275–375 | 2.5–4 min | Common among avid readers and educated professionals |
| Fast reader | 400–700 | 1.5–2.5 min | Often uses skimming strategies |
| Speed reader (trained) | 700–1,000+ | < 1.5 min | Comprehension decreases significantly above ~500 WPM |
Most WPM benchmarks are measured with straightforward prose. Your effective reading rate drops significantly with denser material — and rises with casual or familiar content. When estimating reading time, content type matters as much as reader ability.
| Content type | Typical WPM | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Social media / email | 275–350 | Very short units, familiar vocabulary, low density |
| Blog articles / news | 250–280 | Short paragraphs, common vocabulary, scannable format |
| Literary fiction | 200–250 | Richer prose; readers often slow down for imagery and style |
| Business reports | 175–225 | Familiar structure but denser sentences; readers re-read key data |
| Technical documentation | 100–175 | New concepts, code snippets, diagrams requiring interpretation |
| Academic papers | 80–150 | Dense citations, unfamiliar terminology, complex arguments |
| Textbooks (study reading) | 100–175 | Must retain and comprehend; readers pause to take notes |
These estimates assume an average reading speed of 238 WPM and represent silent, active reading for comprehension — not skimming.
| Word count | Slow (150 WPM) | Average (238 WPM) | Fast (320 WPM) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 300 words | 2 min | 1 min | 1 min |
| 500 words | 3 min | 2 min | 2 min |
| 1,000 words | 7 min | 4 min | 3 min |
| 1,500 words | 10 min | 6 min | 5 min |
| 2,000 words | 13 min | 8 min | 6 min |
| 3,000 words | 20 min | 13 min | 9 min |
| 5,000 words | 33 min | 21 min | 16 min |
Choose a passage of at least 500 words. Time yourself reading at a comfortable, normal pace — not rushing. Divide words by minutes elapsed.
After reading, try to summarize the main points from memory. Speed without retention isn't useful — comprehension should be your real benchmark.
Your reading speed for blog posts may be 40–50% faster than for academic papers. Measure with content similar to what you'll actually be reading.
Skimming (scanning headings and first sentences) is 2–3× faster than reading but captures only a fraction of the content. They're different skills.
Paste your article, blog post, or speech and get an exact estimate in seconds — plus a readability score.
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