Turn that pile of unread books from a source of guilt into a real habit by tracking your reading time. Seeing your progress, even just a few minutes a day, is the best motivation to finally turn those pages.
You bought the books. They're sitting on your nightstand, and that pile is starting to feel more like guilt than joy.
We all want to read more, but wanting doesn't make it happen. To turn that idea into a habit, you have to see the progress you're making, even when it feels slow. An app for tracking reading time helps with that. It’s not about adding another task to your day; it’s about seeing the reading life you already have.
The idea of "tracking" a hobby can feel a little sterile. But it's not about hitting KPIs for your leisure time. It’s about making reading feel less like an abstract goal and more like a concrete practice. Seeing a streak of ten-minute reading sessions is motivating. It’s the difference between a vague "I should read more" and "I'm 15 pages from my weekly goal." You start to see patterns, too—that you read faster on weekends, or that you fly through sci-fi but slow down for non-fiction. It's just about understanding your own habits.
Reading trackers aren't all the same. Some are built for data nerds, others for social connection.
The StoryGraph If you like charts and detailed stats, this is your app. It goes beyond time tracking to analyze the mood and pace of what you read, giving you recommendations based on your specific taste, not just what's popular.
Goodreads Goodreads is the old standard. It’s less about minute-by-minute tracking and more about the community. You can see what friends are reading, write reviews, and join book clubs. Its database has just about every book ever published.
Bookly This one treats reading like a workout. Bookly uses a real-time timer to estimate your reading speed and when you'll finish a book. The gamified achievements can be a good push if you're trying to build a consistent habit, but the free version is pretty limited.
I remember when this finally clicked. I was sitting in my car waiting for a takeout order, holding a book I’d been meaning to read for months. I pulled out my phone, but instead of scrolling social media, I opened Trider—a habit tracker I was already using—and just started a focus session.
I only read for 12 minutes. But seeing that little block of time logged felt like proof. I did have time to read; it was just hiding in the cracks of my day. That was all the motivation I needed. I started tracking every session, turning lost minutes into finished chapters.
A simple notebook or spreadsheet works just as well. The point is to make your reading visible to yourself. You could dedicate a page in a bullet journal to books you've finished or use Google Sheets to track titles, authors, and dates.
The best tool is whichever one you'll actually use.
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There's no such thing as the "most accurate" tracking app, because accuracy depends on what you're measuring. For location, dedicated hardware will always beat a phone; for habits, accuracy is just a measure of your own honesty.
A habit tracker is a tool designed to fight the friction of daily life that derails good intentions. It provides the structure and motivation to turn your goals into consistent actions using simple reminders and the powerful psychology of building a streak.
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Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
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