Struggling to finish books? Learn how to build a daily reading habit using simple, science-backed tips from habit experts so you can read more every day.

You bought the books. You downloaded the reading apps. You even set a goal to read 20 books this year. And yet, two months later, you're still on page 47 of the first one. Sound familiar? The problem isn't your book choices or your schedule — it's that reading hasn't become automatic yet. A daily reading habit doesn't require superhuman discipline. It requires a system that works with your brain, not against it.
The typical approach to reading more goes like this: pick an ambitious number of books, buy a stack, and rely on motivation to get through them. Research tells a different story about how habits actually form. Wendy Wood, a behavioral scientist at USC, found that roughly 43% of our daily actions happen on autopilot — they're habits, not conscious decisions. Reading doesn't fail because you lack willpower. It fails because you're treating it as a decision you make every day instead of a behavior that runs automatically.
Jeremy Dean, a psychologist at University College London, found that forming a new habit takes an average of 66 days of consistent repetition. That's not 66 days of reading War and Peace — it's 66 days of doing something small at the same time, in the same place, until your brain stops needing to think about it.

James Clear's "two-minute rule" from Atomic Habits applies perfectly here. His core insight is that every habit needs to be easy enough to start that you can't say no. For reading, that means committing to just two pages a day. Not a chapter. Not 30 minutes. Two pages. The goal isn't to read a lot — it's to become a person who reads daily. Clear describes this as identity-based habit formation: every time you open a book, you're casting a vote for the type of person you want to become. Two pages cast the same vote as two hundred.
Once you've read consistently for a few weeks, the session length naturally grows. You'll find yourself reading ten pages when you only planned for two, because the hardest part — starting — is already behind you. Read Atomic Habits on BeFreed. For a quick audio deep-dive, listen to Atomic Habits: The 1% Rule Revolution — it covers Clear's four-law framework in under 20 minutes.
The biggest mistake new readers make is scheduling reading for "whenever I have free time." Free time doesn't exist — it gets filled by your phone, Netflix, or chores. Instead, use a technique called habit stacking: attach reading to something you already do every day.
Here's how that looks in practice:
The "after I..." formula works because your existing habit acts as a trigger. You don't need a reminder app or an alarm — your coffee is the alarm. Wendy Wood's research confirms this: habits form faster when they're tied to consistent contexts. The same action, same place, same time. Read Good Habits, Bad Habits on BeFreed for Wood's full breakdown of why context beats motivation every time.

Your environment shapes your behavior more than your intentions do. If your phone is on the nightstand and your book is in the other room, you'll scroll. Every time. Flip that equation:
Jeremy Dean's research on habit formation highlights that reducing friction for the desired behavior — and increasing friction for the competing one — is the most reliable way to change what you do on autopilot. Your willpower is a limited resource. Environment design means you don't need to spend it. Read Making Habits, Breaking Habits on BeFreed. For a quick audio deep-dive, listen to The Science of Sticky Habits — it explains why habits take 66 days (not 21) to stick and how to make it through that window.
One of the fastest ways to kill a reading habit is forcing yourself through a book you hate. Life is too short, and the reading list is too long. If a book doesn't grab you after 50 pages, put it down and pick up something else. The goal is to keep reading, not to finish every book you start. Avid readers quit books all the time — they just don't talk about it.
Not sure what to read next? Preview books before committing. BeFreed's AI-generated podcast summaries let you hear the key ideas from a book in 10 to 40 minutes, so you can decide if it's worth your full attention before diving in.
If you want to understand the science behind why habits work (and how to make them stick), these three books are the best starting points:
For more on reading specifically, check out The Deep Reading Renaissance — a podcast episode on how to reclaim deep focus in an age of distraction.
Building a reading habit is easier when every book feels accessible. BeFreed turns 50,000+ book titles into AI-powered podcast summaries — choose a 10, 20, or 40-minute format that fits your schedule. Use it to preview books before you buy them, catch up on titles you don't have time to read cover-to-cover, or reinforce what you've already read. When reading feels low-friction and rewarding, the habit takes care of itself.