How long does it take to read 1,000 words?
The short answer: at an average adult reading speed of about 238 words per minute (wpm), 1,000 words takes roughly 4 minutes and 12 seconds to read silently. But "average" hides a lot of range, so the honest answer depends on who is reading and why.
Want your exact number for a specific piece? Paste it into the reading time calculator and adjust the speed. For quick reference, here are common lengths at three speeds:
| Words | Slow (150 wpm) | Average (238 wpm) | Fast (300 wpm) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 500 | 3 min 20 sec | 2 min 6 sec | 1 min 40 sec |
| 1,000 | 6 min 40 sec | 4 min 12 sec | 3 min 20 sec |
| 2,000 | 13 min 20 sec | 8 min 24 sec | 6 min 40 sec |
| 5,000 | 33 min 20 sec | 21 min | 16 min 40 sec |
Why reading speed varies so much
Silent reading speed for adults clusters around 200–260 wpm for typical prose, which is why publishers' "min read" labels tend to assume something in the low 200s. But comprehension matters: dense, technical, or unfamiliar material naturally slows you to 150–180 wpm because you pause to process. Reading in a second language slows you further, often to around 100–120 wpm. On the other end, a practiced reader skimming for the gist can move at 400 wpm or more — at the cost of detail.
That is why a single fixed number is misleading. The estimate you want is the one that matches your reader and your purpose. A study guide should be timed at a slow, careful pace; a casual blog post at the average.
Reading vs. speaking time
If the 1,000 words are going to be read aloud rather than silently, the time roughly doubles — speaking runs near 130 wpm, so 1,000 words is about 7.5 minutes spoken. If you are timing a talk or a script, use the speech timer instead.
How to use reading time well
Reading-time estimates are most useful as expectations, not stopwatches. Adding "≈ 4 min read" to an article sets a reader's commitment up front and tends to improve completion rates. For email, keeping a message under a one-minute read (about 240 words) respects your reader's time. And for study, dividing a chapter's word count by your careful reading speed gives a realistic session length so you can plan breaks.
Ready to time your own text? Open the reading time calculator — it is free, instant, and your text never leaves your browser.