The K–12 assigned-reading reference
School reading lists by grade, state, and curriculum.
ReadingList is a free, source-cited database of the books U.S. schools actually assign — for parents, teachers, homeschool families, and librarians. Every list traces to a primary source.
- 1,690
- books
- 82
- curricula
- 50
- states
- 6,118
- indexed pages
Is a book on your child’s list?
Tap “Save” on any book to build your child’s list — it’s in My list whenever you come back. Saved on this device, no account needed.
Aligned withCommon CoreAPIBCambridge50-state standardsEvery list sourced & cited
Today’s assigned read
A frequently-assigned title to discover — a fresh one each day.
Today’s pickWonderby R.J. PalacioSelected for you
Tell us the reading level and we’ll pick frequently-assigned books that fit — never a mismatch. We show nothing here until we’re sure, and it stays on this device (no account, no personal details).
Start with what you know
Pick the way your school organizes reading. Every path lands on source-cited lists you can filter, save, and print.
What books do U.S. schools assign most?
The titles referenced most across state & national curricula in our database — sourced from state departments of education, district reading lists, and award committees like the Newbery and Caldecott Medals.
WonderR.J. Palacio · 790L
New KidJerry Craft
ShilohPhyllis Reynolds Naylor · 890L
HolesLouis Sachar · 660L
Maniac MageeJerry Spinelli · 820L
Because of Winn-DixieKate DiCamillo · 610L
RefugeeAlan Gratz · 800L
Diary of a Wimpy KidJeff Kinney · 950L
Escape from Mr. Lemoncello's LibraryChris Grabenstein
The Tale of DespereauxKate DiCamillo · 670L
Reading the whole frequently-assigned reading list? Kids who struggle with the print versions often finish the assigned books by listening.
Listen free on Audible30-day trialNew members only · many assigned titles are included with the membership. As an Amazon Associate, ReadingList earns from qualifying purchases and membership trials at no extra cost to you.
How we know
Every list traces to a primary source.
We don’t guess at what schools assign, and we don’t write reviews or summaries. Every title on ReadingList is drawn from an authoritative document — state Department of Education ELA standards, the College Board AP Course Audit, IB Diploma Programme guides, Common Core Appendix B exemplars, and district curriculum lists — and each page links to the source so you can check it yourself. We re-verify quarterly.
Plan ahead by season
Timely reading lists for the school calendar — summer reading, back-to-school prep, and frequently-challenged titles.