Reading Speed and Memory Statistics – SpeeRead
Reading Speed and Memory Statistics. Explore real data on average reading speed (wpm) and memory capacity (%) from SpeeRead programs – DEMO results, pre-training tests, and progress after training.
OPTIMIZED READING


Introduction
The SpeeRead platform provides clear statistical insights into user performance regarding reading speed (words per minute – wpm) and memory capacity (%). These results come from the demo test (DEMO), comprehensive pre-training tests, and long-term progress after completing the full training program.
Key Data
1. DEMO Test (until February 2017)
395 valid results
Average reading speed: 255 wpm
Average memory capacity: 79%
Most frequent range: 250–300 wpm with ~75% memory
– Validation: typical reading speed ~250–300 wpm, usual memory ~70%
2. Initial Pre-Training Tests (T1–T3, same users)
216 valid results
Average reading speed: 303 wpm
Average memory capacity: 72%
Longer text (1,000–1,500 words), questionnaire with 10 questions
3. DEMO Evolution (until March 2018)
March 2018: 684 valid results (vs. 395 in Feb. 2017)
Average speed increased from 255 wpm to 277 wpm
Memory capacity remained stable (~79% → 78%)
Distribution stable: majority still at 250–300 wpm, memory around 75%
4. Extended DEMO Statistics (until 2019)
About 8,900 DEMO results analyzed in total
Most frequent reading speeds: 201–300 wpm
Typical memory capacity: 60–70%, with DEMO quiz results most often at 75%
5. Performance Boost After Training
SpeeRead trainees increased their reading speed by 40–200%
Structure after training:
40% remain in slow reading
50% reach normal unoptimized reading
10% achieve optimized normal reading
Personal cases: speeds of up to 1,271 wpm within just 6 weeks
Summary
DEMO (≤ Feb. 2017): ~255 wpm, ~79% memory (395 results)
Pre-training (T1–T3): ~303 wpm, ~72% memory (216 results)
Updated DEMO (≤ Mar. 2018): ~277 wpm, ~78% memory (684 results)
Stable distributions: most users 250–300 wpm, memory ~75–79%
Extended data (≤ 2019): 201–300 wpm most frequent; memory 60–70%
Post-training: speed increase of 40–200%; some reach >1,000 wpm
FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)
Q1: What is the “usual reading speed”?
A: It refers to the most common reading speed recorded in demo tests – typically between 250 and 300 wpm, validated by thousands of users.
Q2: How does reading speed compare before and after training?
A: With SpeeRead programs, reading speed increases by 40–200%, and some learners achieve speeds above 1,000 wpm in just a few weeks.
Q3: What memory capacity can I expect with DEMO and after training?
A: DEMO shows an average of ~79%. After training, memory capacity typically improves by 5–15%.
Q4: Why does memory capacity seem slightly lower with longer texts?
A: DEMO quizzes use only 4 questions, giving more “inflated” results (~75%). Longer tests with 10 questions provide a more precise measure, usually around 70–72%.
Conclusion
SpeeRead provides a clear statistical picture of real user performance:
Typical reading speed: 250–300 wpm
Usual memory capacity: ~70–79%
With training, significant improvements are possible – many learners exceed 1,000 wpm
These results confirm the consistency and effectiveness of SpeeRead programs in developing optimized speed reading and efficient memory retention.
👉 Start your SpeeRead training today! Boost your reading speed and memory capacity with our online programs. Discover SpeeRead