How to Read EPUB Books on Any Device (2026 Guide)
You just downloaded an EPUB — maybe ten of them — and now you're staring at a file wondering how it becomes a book. Good news: every device you own can read it, usually with an app that's already installed. Here is the fastest route on Kindle, iPhone, Android, and computer.
First: what is an EPUB?
EPUB (electronic publication) is the open, universal ebook format — the closest thing digital books have to an MP3. Unlike a PDF, an EPUB reflows: the text adapts to your screen size, and you control the font, text size, spacing, and light/dark mode. That's what makes a novel comfortable to read on anything from a phone to a 10-inch tablet. Nearly every reading app on earth supports it.
Read EPUB on a Kindle
The old myth is that Kindles can't handle EPUB. Not anymore: Amazon's free Send to Kindle service accepts EPUB files directly and converts them to Kindle format automatically. Three ways to do it:
- Web (easiest): go to amazon.com/sendtokindle, sign in, and drag your EPUB into the upload box (files up to 200 MB). It appears in your Kindle library, usually within a minute or two.
- Email: every Kindle has a unique @kindle.com address (find it under Manage Your Content and Devices › Preferences). Email the EPUB to that address from an approved sender email.
- App: the Send to Kindle app for Windows and Mac lets you right-click-and-send files from your desktop.
One catch worth knowing: you can't just copy an EPUB onto the Kindle over USB and expect it to open — it needs to go through Send to Kindle so Amazon can convert it. Once it's delivered, it syncs across your Kindle devices like any other book, with your page position and highlights intact.
Read EPUB on iPhone or iPad
The reader is already on your phone: Apple Books. Download the EPUB in Safari (or find it in the Files app), tap it, and choose Open in Books — or tap the Share icon and pick Books from the list. Done. The book lives in your library permanently, and your reading position and highlights sync across your iPhone, iPad, and Mac. Apple Books handles EPUB natively and beautifully; for a Regency binge at 1 a.m., the sepia page theme is elite.
Read EPUB on Android
Google Play Books is the built-in answer. Open the Play Books app, tap your profile picture, and choose the option to upload files — or upload at play.google.com/books from any browser — and your EPUB joins your library, synced across every device you're signed into, including reading via the web. If you prefer a dedicated app, Moon+ Reader and ReadEra are long-standing favorites, and Kobo's app also opens EPUBs. On Android you can even just tap the downloaded file and pick whichever reader you've installed.
Read EPUB on Windows or Mac
Two free tools cover everything on desktop:
- Thorium Reader (Windows, Mac, Linux) — a clean, modern, open-source EPUB reader. Install, open your file, read. If you only want to read, this is the one.
- Calibre (Windows, Mac, Linux) — the Swiss Army knife: a full library manager with a built-in reader that can also convert between formats and send books to devices. If you're building a permanent ebook collection, Calibre is where it lives.
Mac users have a third option that requires zero downloads: Apple Books is preinstalled and opens EPUBs with a double-click.
What "DRM-free" means (and why you want it)
DRM — digital rights management — is copy-protection baked into most store-bought ebooks. It locks the book to one company's app and account: a DRM'd book can't be opened elsewhere, moved freely between apps, or truly backed up. If the store closes your account or shuts down, your "purchased" books can vanish with it.
A DRM-free EPUB has no lock. You own the actual file. Read it in Apple Books today, Play Books tomorrow, send it to your Kindle, keep a copy in your cloud drive — forever, on every device you'll ever own, with no account standing between you and your books. It's the difference between owning a paperback and borrowing one from a store that can change its mind. That's why every book in the Margot St. James collection ships DRM-free, in both EPUB and PDF.
Ten steamy Regency romances for $9.99
The Margot St. James collection is built for exactly this craving: high-heat, high-tension Regency romance running on forced proximity, blackmail, and morally-grey heroes — with full emotional arcs and earned happily-ever-afters. Ten full-length novels, one instant download.
$79.90 $9.99 for all 10
400,000+ words • EPUB & PDF • DRM-free
Quick answers by device
- Kindle: upload at amazon.com/sendtokindle (or email to your @kindle.com address). Auto-converts, syncs everywhere.
- iPhone / iPad: tap the file › Open in Books. Already installed.
- Android: upload to Google Play Books, or open with Moon+ Reader / ReadEra.
- Windows: Thorium Reader to read; Calibre to manage a library.
- Mac: double-click — Apple Books is preinstalled.
- EPUB or PDF? EPUB for reading (reflowable, adjustable text); PDF when you want a fixed layout or to print.
Frequently asked questions
Can Kindle read EPUB files?
Yes. Amazon's free Send to Kindle service accepts EPUBs — upload at amazon.com/sendtokindle, email the file to your @kindle.com address, or use the Send to Kindle app — and converts them automatically. Just don't copy the file over USB; it has to go through Send to Kindle.
How do I open an EPUB on my iPhone?
Tap the downloaded file (or use the Share icon) and choose Open in Books. Apple Books is built into every iPhone and iPad and syncs your page position across devices.
What does DRM-free mean?
No copy-protection lock. You truly own the file: read it in any app on any device, back it up, and never lose it if a store closes your account or disappears.