Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 10
UK Youth Reading Enjoyment Rises to 36.1% in 2026, First Gain Since 2021
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 10

UK Youth Reading Enjoyment Rises to 36.1% in 2026, First Gain Since 2021

3 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jun 10

Summary

  • 36.1% of UK children and young people said they enjoyed reading in their spare time in 2026, up from 32.7% in 2025 and marking the first annual increase in five years.
  • 20.3% of 8- to 18-year-olds said they read daily, versus 18.7% last year, in the National Literacy Trust survey of 125,375 pupils across 479 schools.
  • Older teenagers drove much of the rebound: reading enjoyment among 14- to 16-year-olds rose to 35% from 28.6%, while the 16- to 18 group climbed to 49.4% from 41.4%.
  • 61.6% of children aged 5 to 8 still enjoyed reading, but that slipped from 62.6%; the trust said fewer boys in that age group reported liking reading.
  • 32.1% of pupils receiving free school meals enjoyed reading, against 37.3% of those not receiving them, widening a gap that Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said must be addressed.

Insights

While national reading enjoyment is rising, why is the gap between rich and poor students widening?
Beyond the National Year of Reading, what is the plan to sustain this momentum and prevent another decline?
As digital formats boost reading enjoyment, are we trading deep literacy for screen-deep engagement?