Start free, then upgrade when the recall workflow earns its place.
You are not paying for text compression alone. You are paying for a system that helps you recover useful ideas from books faster than you could on your own.
Start with one real book
Pay for continuity, not novelty
Best for high-stakes reading
Plans
Use the trial to answer one question
Does one summary, one recall check, and one revisit make the book easier to remember when you actually need it? If yes, upgrading is usually straightforward.
What the trial should prove
Start with a book that matters right now. A planning book before a strategy session, a management book before a hard conversation, or a study book before a review block.
The goal is not to browse features. It is to see whether ReadSprint reduces the effort needed to understand, review, and reuse the idea later.
- Generate or open one book summary
- Save the book to your library
- Answer one recall question while the ideas are still fresh
- Reopen the summary before a meeting, project, or study session
When upgrading makes sense
Upgrade when you know this is helping you remember and reuse ideas, not because you feel pressured to collect another subscription.
Strong fit
You revisit books for work, study, meetings, writing, or decision-making, and you want that review to be faster and more reliable.
Weak fit
You mainly want a one-time summary and do not expect to reopen, quiz yourself, or build a reusable reading system.