Free Spanish reading finder

Find Spanish reading content at your level

Explore level-matched Spanish articles on topics you actually want to read, from world news and technology to culture, sport, health, and science.

Who it is for

A Spanish reading finder for learners who want real articles, not random worksheets

Self-study learners

Use the finder when you know your CEFR level but need a steady stream of Spanish texts that feel challenging without becoming frustrating.

Busy returners

Restart Spanish with short A1 and A2 articles before moving back into longer B1 news and opinion pieces.

Topic-driven readers

Choose politics, world news, science, business, sport, culture, or health so repeated vocabulary appears in meaningful context.

Interactive finder

Filter by CEFR level and topic

Choose A1, A2, or B1, then narrow the library by topic. The article previews below are crawlable entry points into the kind of practice Lectura creates for learners.

Level matching

How A1/A2/B1 matching works

A1

Short, concrete Spanish

A1 matching favors short sentences, frequent words, present-tense narration, and clear repetition. Use it for first-pass comprehension and confidence.

Spanish A1 reading →
A2

Simple connected articles

A2 adds more connectors, common past and future forms, and everyday explanations while keeping paragraphs compact and vocabulary controlled.

Spanish A2 reading →
B1

Fuller news comprehension

B1 keeps the real-world topic and argument visible while introducing longer paragraphs, more nuance, and the vocabulary needed for native news sources.

Spanish B1 reading →

Reading paths

Example reading paths by topic

Technology Spanish

  1. Start with A1 technology summaries about apps, phones, and AI.
  2. Move to A2 articles that explain causes, timelines, and user impact.
  3. Read B1 technology news to practice opinion, risk, and policy vocabulary.
Browse Spanish technology articles →

World news Spanish

  1. Read A1 world news for countries, people, and basic events.
  2. Use A2 to connect what happened, where it happened, and why it matters.
  3. Use B1 for international relations, context, and reported speech.
Browse Spanish world news →

Health Spanish

  1. Begin with A1 health routines and concrete body vocabulary.
  2. Use A2 articles for advice, research summaries, and public-health changes.
  3. Move to B1 for medical findings, expert quotes, and nuanced recommendations.
Browse Spanish health articles →

Explore more

FAQ

Questions about finding Spanish reading content

What level of Spanish reading should I choose?

Choose A1 if you need very short, concrete texts; A2 if you can follow simple connected paragraphs; and B1 if you can read longer articles with occasional dictionary support.

Can I use the same Spanish article at A1, A2, and B1?

Yes. Lectura is designed around level switching, so one story can become a simpler A1 version, an elementary A2 version, or a fuller B1 version.

Which topics are best for Spanish reading practice?

The best topic is one you will read repeatedly. Technology, world news, culture, health, business, and sport all work well because key vocabulary returns across many articles.

How often should I read Spanish at my level?

Short daily sessions work best. Ten to fifteen minutes of level-matched Spanish reading most days is usually more sustainable than one long weekly session.