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    Reading speed test (words per minute)

    Measure your silent reading speed on a calibrated passage, with comprehension questions — because reading fast without retaining anything isn't reading.

    Pick a passage

    Read at your natural pace — no racing, no dawdling. Three comprehension questions follow (without looking back), because a speed only counts if you actually read.

    What is the average reading speed?

    Adults read silently at 200-300 words per minute with good comprehension (the research mean is ~238 wpm). Reading aloud runs slower, around 150-180 wpm, limited by breath and articulation. And past ~400 wpm silent, controlled studies agree: you're skimming, and comprehension pays the price.

    LevelWords/minContext
    Grade 1~60oral reading fluency
    Grade 3~110oral reading fluency
    Grade 5~140oral reading fluency
    Grade 8~170oral, transitioning to silent
    Adult200-300silent reading
    Trained reader350-500silent — check comprehension

    Indicative benchmarks — text difficulty and familiarity move these numbers as much as skill does.

    And how fast do you talk?

    Reading and speaking are two different speeds. Our free voice test measures your speaking rate in syllables per second, from a 30-second mic sample, benchmarked against clinical norms.

    Frequently asked questions

    What is the average reading speed?

    Adults read silently at about 200-300 words per minute with good comprehension (the research average is around 238 wpm for non-fiction). Reading aloud is slower, around 150-180 wpm. Trained readers can reach 350-500 wpm, but beyond ~400 wpm most people are skimming, not reading.

    How does this test measure my reading speed?

    You read a calibrated passage while a timer runs, then answer three comprehension questions from memory. Your speed is words divided by time, in words per minute. The questions matter: a high speed with poor comprehension means you skimmed — the test tells you when that happens.

    Can I learn to read faster?

    Somewhat. Regular reading widens your visual span and automates word recognition, and reducing subvocalization (pronouncing every word in your head) helps you break the ~160 wpm speech ceiling. But claims of 1,000+ wpm with full comprehension don't survive controlled studies — comprehension drops sharply past ~400 wpm.

    Why does my speed change between texts?

    Reading speed depends on the text as much as the reader: vocabulary, sentence length, and familiarity with the topic all matter. Take the test on both passages to get a range rather than a single number.

    Is this test free? Are my results stored?

    Yes, completely free with no signup. Everything runs in your browser: neither your reading nor your answers are uploaded or stored.

    Embed this tool on your site

    Teacher, blogger, coach, or journalist? Copy this code to embed the tool right into your page, course, or article. Free, no strings attached — please keep the credit link.

    <iframe src="https://talkslower.com/tools/reading-speed-test/embed" width="100%" height="820" style="border:0;border-radius:16px;overflow:hidden" title="Reading Speed Test" loading="lazy"></iframe>
    <p style="font-size:14px"><a href="https://talkslower.com/tools/reading-speed-test" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Reading Speed Test</a> — a free tool by Talk Slower</p>

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