Want to read more consistently? Here’s how to build a reading habit that actually sticks, even if you’re busy, distracted, or rusty.
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Get it on Play StoreI’ll be honest: a lot of reading advice is weirdly unrealistic.
People say stuff like “read 50 pages every morning” as if everyone wakes up calm, focused, and ready to hang out with a hardcover at 6:00 a.m. I don’t know who those people are.
I used to set these big, dramatic reading goals. “This is the month I become a reader.” Then I’d read for 45 minutes on day one, skip day two, feel guilty on day three, and by day six the book was living face-down on my nightstand like a tiny monument to failure.
The problem usually isn’t that you “lack discipline.” That word gets thrown around way too much.
The problem is that your reading habit is probably too vague, too inconvenient, or too ambitious.
If you want a reading habit that sticks, make it stupidly easy to start. Not impressive. Not aesthetic. Easy.
“Read more” sounds nice, but it’s useless.
More than what? One page? Ten books? Last year? Your friend who reads 80 books and somehow also has a social life?
A habit needs to be measurable. Otherwise your brain treats it like a suggestion.
Try one of these instead:
Notice how these are tiny and specific.
And yeah, tiny works. I know it sounds almost too easy. But that’s the point. Consistency beats intensity when you’re trying to make something automatic.
I’d rather you read 4 pages a day for 60 days than 40 pages a day for 3 days.
This is the part people skip because it feels “not enough.”
But “not enough” is exactly how habits survive real life.
If your current reading habit is zero, your starter goal should be almost laughably small:
Seriously.
On busy days, your job is not to make huge progress. Your job is to keep the streak alive.
I’ve had phases where my whole reading habit was literally “open the book and read one page.” That’s it. And weirdly, once I started, I often kept going for 10 or 15 minutes anyway.
Starting is the hard part. Not reading.
A reading habit sticks way better when it’s attached to something that already happens.
This is the easiest habit trick I know, and honestly, it’s underrated.
Instead of saying, “I’ll read sometime tonight,” say:
That’s called habit stacking, but you don’t need the fancy term. You just need the pattern.
When X happens, I read.
The clearer the trigger, the less thinking required.
And less thinking matters. Because the moment your brain has to negotiate, it starts saying dumb stuff like, “Maybe later,” which usually means never.
Look, if your book is in another room and your phone is in your hand, you already know who’s going to win.
Not because you’re lazy. Because friction matters.
If you want to read more, reduce the number of steps between you and the book.
Here’s what helps:
I started reading more when I stopped pretending I only “counted” reading if it happened in a perfect cozy setup.
A few pages while waiting at the dentist? Counts.
Ten minutes on Kindle during a grocery line? Counts.
Audiobook while folding laundry? Also counts. And honestly, audiobook snobs need to relax.
Reading is reading. Consuming books in a way that fits your life is better than romanticizing a habit you never do.
This one is huge.
A lot of people don’t have a reading habit problem. They have a boring book problem.
If you’re trying to force yourself through a book you secretly hate because it’s “good for you,” no wonder the habit feels painful.
You are allowed to quit books.
Actually, I think more people should quit books faster.
If you’re 30-50 pages in and you’re dragging yourself through every page, put it down. Life is not long enough to spend 3 weeks fake-reading something that feels like homework.
Try this simple rule:
Especially when you’re building the habit, momentum matters more than literary prestige.
Pick books that make you want to come back tomorrow.
Fast-paced fiction. Short essays. Memoirs. Pop science. Thrillers. Whatever works.
Honestly, “read what you should read” is overrated.
A lot of people set goals like “read 30 books this year,” and then immediately make reading feel stressful.
I’m not against book goals. I just think they can backfire if they push you into speed-reading or guilt.
A better move: set a minimum daily floor.
For example:
Or:
This changes everything psychologically.
Now you’re not failing because you “only” read a little. You’re succeeding because you hit the baseline.
That feeling matters. Habits grow faster when they feel doable.
I’m a big fan of tracking habits because memory is flaky.
You think you’ve “barely read this week,” but then you check and realize you read 5 out of 7 days. That’s actually solid.
You don’t need some giant spreadsheet.
Just track:
That’s enough.
I use habit trackers for this kind of thing because seeing a chain build is weirdly motivating. If you want a simple option, Trider on myhabits.in is genuinely helpful for tracking a daily reading habit without overcomplicating it.
And that’s important because the tracker should support the habit, not become the habit.
Don’t spend 12 minutes color-coding your reading stats when you could’ve just read 6 pages.
This is the secret sauce, honestly.
Most habits don’t fail on normal days. They fail on messy days.
You slept badly. Work ran late. Your brain is fried. You don’t want to do anything remotely noble.
So plan for that now.
Create a “minimum viable reading habit” for bad days:
That’s your backup plan.
And no, it’s not cheating.
It’s how you avoid the classic all-or-nothing spiral: “I missed yesterday, so the streak is broken, so who cares, I’ll restart Monday.”
Nope. Monday is fake. Read one page tonight.
I say this as someone who has absolutely lost 27 minutes to “just checking one thing.”
Phones are habit killers because they’re frictionless, infinite, and always more stimulating in the moment.
If you want to read before bed, don’t put your book next to your phone. Put your phone across the room.
If you want to read in the morning, don’t open social media first. That’s like trying to eat an apple after someone handed you fries.
A few practical fixes:
You do not need stronger willpower. You need fewer ambushes.
This sounds a little cheesy, but it works.
Don’t just think, “I’m trying to read more.”
Think, “I’m someone who reads every day.”
Even if right now that means 3 pages.
Identity shifts happen through proof. Every time you read, you’re casting a vote for that version of yourself.
And small proof counts.
You do not become “a reader” after finishing 20 books in one dramatic burst. You become a reader by being the kind of person who reads regularly, even in tiny amounts.
If you want zero overthinking, do this:
That’s it.
Not 75 hard. Not a color-coded reading challenge. Not a 22-step life reset.
Just 5 pages a day, in a specific moment, with a backup plan.
That’s how habits stick.
If your reading habit keeps collapsing, the answer usually isn’t “try harder.”
It’s: make it smaller, clearer, and easier.
That’s what finally worked for me. I stopped chasing the fantasy version of the habit and built one I could do when I was busy, distracted, or kind of lazy.
Which, to be fair, is most real life.
And once the habit feels natural, you can always grow it.
But first? Make it survive.
If you want to actually track this stuff, I use Trider — it's free at myhabits.in