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September 02, 2025

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Los Angeles Times

Reading for pleasure has plummeted more than 40% among U.S. adults over the last two decades, a new study finds

- BY HAILEY BRANSON-POTTS

ENJOYING THIS HEADLINE? YOU'RE A RARITY

GERARD BURKHART For The Times

APOLLO, one of the two cats at Iliad bookstore in North Hollywood, monitors the cash register next to manager Poul Kwik.

Put down the book, pick up the phone.

So it goes in the United States, where daily reading for pleasure has plummeted more than 40% among adults over the last two decades, according to a new study from the University of Florida and University College London.

From 2003 to 2023, daily leisure reading declined at a steady rate of about 3% per year, according to the study published recently in the journal iScience.

"This decline is concerning given earlier evidence for downward trends in reading for pleasure from the 1940s through to the start of our study in 2003, suggesting at least 80 years of continued decline in reading for pleasure," the paper states.

Jill Sonke, one of the study's authors, said in an interview last month that the decline is concerning in part because "we know that reading for pleasure, among other forms of arts participation, is a health behavior. It is associated with relaxation, well-being, mental health, quality of life."

"We're losing a low-hanging fruit in our health toolkit when we're reading or participating in the arts less," added Sonke, the director of research initiatives at the UF Center for Arts in Medicine and co-director of the university’s Epi-Arts Lab.

The reading decline comes as most Americans have more access to books than ever. Because of Libby and other e-book apps, people do not need to travel to libraries or bookstores. They can check out books from multiple libraries and read them on their tablets or phones.

But other forms of digital media are crowding out the free moments that people could devote to books.

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