Best apps to read books

Best apps to read books in Spanish (2026)

The best apps to read books in Spanish are parallel-reading apps that show the original text beside a translation, with audio and a way to save new words. Ranked for Spanish, Lingo7 leads for reading full books you choose, followed by LingQ, Beelinguapp, EWA. Each fits a different reader; the comparison below is honest about the trade-offs.

  1. 1

    Lingo7

    Best for reading full books

    Read any book in your target language with a sentence-by-sentence parallel translation, native-narrated audio and a built-in vocabulary trainer.

    • Reading: Any book: built-in catalog plus your own uploads (EPUB, PDF, FB2, TXT, DOCX, HTML)
    • Audio: Yes
    • Languages: 49 languages
    • Price: free to start, with an optional premium subscription

    Best for: Reading real books, yours or ours, with parallel translation and audio, across 49 languages

  2. 2

    LingQ

    A comprehensible-input reader: import books or lessons, tap every unknown word to save it, and track what you know across everything you read.

    • Reading: Any content, including imported EPUB, PDF, DOCX, TXT and MOBI, plus a large lesson library
    • Audio: Yes
    • Languages: 50+ (some in beta)
    • Price: a free trial, then Premium at about $10 to $15 per month

    Best for: Importing and mining your own content in many languages, if you like tracking every word you know

    Visit LingQ →
  3. 3

    Beelinguapp

    Read short bilingual stories, news and audiobooks with the two languages side by side and karaoke-style audio.

    • Reading: A fixed catalog of graded stories, news and audiobooks (no imports)
    • Audio: Yes
    • Languages: About 20 languages
    • Price: a free tier with ads, then Premium at about $7 per month

    Best for: Beginner and intermediate read-while-listen practice on short graded stories

    Visit Beelinguapp →
  4. 4

    EWA

    Learn English, Spanish or French from adapted books and movie clips, with tap-to-translate, synced audio, flashcards and AI speaking practice.

    • Reading: A fixed catalog of adapted, licensed books and movie clips (no imports)
    • Audio: Yes
    • Languages: 3 languages (EN, ES, FR)
    • Price: a free trial, then premium at about $4 to $16 per month depending on the plan and store

    Best for: Learning English, Spanish or French from adapted books and movies, with speaking practice

    Visit EWA →
  5. 5

    Readlang

    A browser-based reader: import a text or ebook, click any word or phrase for a translation, and every lookup becomes a review card.

    • Reading: Any text or ebook you import (EPUB or TXT), plus a shared community library; web-based
    • Audio: Limited
    • Languages: 100+ (web-based)
    • Price: a free tier, then Premium at about $6 per month

    Best for: Reading your own imported texts in almost any language, from a desktop browser

    Visit Readlang →
  6. 6

    Readle

    Short daily graded stories (A1 to B2) with tap-to-translate, native audio and vocabulary flashcards.

    • Reading: A fixed catalog of short graded stories (A1 to B2), no imports
    • Audio: Yes
    • Languages: 6 languages
    • Price: a rotating set of free stories, then Premium at about $10 to $15 per month

    Best for: A structured daily graded-reading habit in one of its six languages

    Visit Readle →

Spanish reading apps compared

Feature comparison, as of July 2026.

App Read your own booksParallel translationSynced audioVocabulary trainerSpeaking practice Languages Price
Lingo7 YesYesYesYesYes 49 languages Free + premium
LingQ YesNoYesYesLimited 50+ (some in beta) ~$10-15/mo
Beelinguapp NoYesYesLimitedNo About 20 languages Free + ~$7/mo
EWA NoNoYesYesYes 3 languages (EN, ES, FR) ~$4-16/mo
Readlang LimitedNoLimitedYesNo 100+ (web-based) Free + ~$6/mo
Readle NoNoYesYesNo 6 languages ~$10-15/mo

Read real books in Spanish, free to start

Lingo7 lets you read any book in Spanish, the built-in catalog or your own upload, with the original and a sentence-by-sentence translation side by side, native-narrated audio, and a tap to send new words to a review deck. Free to start.

How we ranked these Spanish reading apps

This list is about one job: reading real books in Spanish. We ranked each app on how well it does that, in this order: whether you can read the book you actually want (your own upload, not just a fixed catalog), whether it shows a parallel translation so you rarely stall, whether it has audio to read and listen at once, whether it turns reading into vocabulary you keep, and how many languages it covers.

Every fact in the table is checked against each app's own store listing and site (as of July 2026); we link out so you can verify. This guide is published by Lingo7, so treat our own entry with healthy skepticism and compare the columns yourself. We have tried to be accurate and fair about what every app does well, and where it falls short, including ours.

This list only includes apps that genuinely support reading in Spanish. If you already read on a Kindle, its bilingual dictionaries and translate feature work for any book you own, and the open-source reader Lute lets advanced learners import almost anything, both without a parallel translation or synced audio.

The short version on each app

Lingo7

Strong: Reads any book, the built-in catalog or your own upload (EPUB, PDF, FB2, TXT, DOCX, HTML), with the original and a full translation side by side

Limit: Pronunciation scoring covers English, Spanish and French only

LingQ

Strong: Imports and reads full books (EPUB, PDF, DOCX, TXT, MOBI), auto-split into chapters, so you can read your own library

Limit: No continuous side-by-side parallel translation; you tap words or read one sentence at a time, so dense text means a lot of tapping

Beelinguapp

Strong: Side-by-side parallel text with karaoke audio highlighting is genuinely good for read-while-listen practice

Limit: You cannot import your own books; you are limited to the fixed catalog, and classics appear as short adaptations, not full novels

EWA

Strong: Large curated library with professional synced audio and karaoke-style highlighting

Limit: Only three learnable languages (English, Spanish, French); the "35 languages" figure is interface translation, not content you can learn

Readlang

Strong: Reads your own imported texts and ebooks in 100+ languages, with a click-to-translate that works on almost any language

Limit: Web-based only, with no native mobile app, and it imports EPUB or plain text but not PDF

Readle

Strong: Consistent CEFR leveling (A1 to B2, C1 for German) across a large library of short stories

Limit: No real books: you cannot import EPUB or PDF, and reading is limited to short graded stories, not full-length books

Frequently asked questions

What is the best app to read books in Spanish?

For reading full books in Spanish with the original and a translation side by side, Lingo7 is the most complete option: Read any book in your target language with a sentence-by-sentence parallel translation, native-narrated audio and a built-in vocabulary trainer. It reads any book you upload, not just a fixed catalog, and sends tapped words to a spaced-repetition trainer, across 49 languages. The right pick still depends on whether you want to read your own books or a fixed catalog, and whether you need audio, which the table above lays out.

Can you learn Spanish just by reading?

Reading does a lot of the work: it builds vocabulary and grammatical intuition through repeated exposure in real context. It is most effective when the text is slightly above your level, you can check meaning instantly (tap a word or read a parallel translation), and you add listening. Pair reading with a little speaking practice and it covers most of the skills you need in Spanish.

Are there apps to read your own books in Spanish?

Yes. Lingo7 and LingQ let you import your own files (for example EPUB or PDF) and read them in Spanish with translation support, rather than being limited to a built-in catalog. Most other reading apps only offer their own fixed library of stories.

What is the best free app to read in Spanish?

Most of these apps have a free tier and a paid upgrade. Lingo7 has a free tier, so you can start reading in Spanish at no cost and decide later. Free tiers usually limit how much of the catalog you can open or add ads; the paid plans remove those limits. Prices are in the table above (as of July 2026).