Best E-Readers for Textbooks (2026)

Textbooks are not the same as novels. Class materials tend to be denser, more visual, and more annotation-heavy than regular long-form reading.

If your core workflow is lecture notes, course packets, and revision files, a bigger screen, stylus support, and storage often matter more than portability.

Comparison Table

Start with the three most relevant devices and compare the columns that matter most for this use case.

Open full comparison →
DeviceScreenStylusStoragePrice
BOOX Note Air4 C10.3"Yes64 GB$499
BOOX Go 10.3 202410.3"Yes64 GB$410
iReader Smart X3 202310.65"Yes128 GB$459

Top Picks

  1. 10.3"Color$499
    • Best For:Students/researchers: Stylus support for notes and PDF annotation
    • Key Advantage:10.3" large screen · 300 ppi resolution · 9-week battery · 4.5★ rating · color display · stylus support
  2. 10.3"B&W$410
    • Best For:Students/researchers: Stylus support for notes and PDF annotation
    • Key Advantage:10.3" large screen · 300 ppi resolution · 9-week battery · 4.5★ rating · stylus support
  3. 10.65"B&W$459
    • Best For:Students/researchers: Stylus support for notes and PDF annotation
    • Key Advantage:10.65" large screen · 11-week battery · stylus support

Individual Reviews

Buying Guide

If you have not locked a model yet, sort the tradeoffs for textbooks first, then read the individual reviews.

Priority 1

Start with a 10-inch-class display, stylus support, and at least 32GB of storage.

Priority 2

For textbooks, page navigation, annotation, and file organization often matter more than color.

Priority 3

If you carry it all day on campus, then weigh screen size against portability and battery.

FAQ

Do I need stylus support for textbooks?

Not always, but stylus support makes a real difference if you annotate, take class notes, or mark up key sections.

What hurts textbook reading most?

Usually a screen that is too small and a document workflow that feels messy or slow.

Is 7 inches enough for textbooks?

It can work, but 10-inch-class devices are far more comfortable for denser textbook layouts, tables, and class packets.