How to Read EPUB on Kindle (3 Methods That Work in 2026)

How to Read EPUB on Kindle (3 Methods That Work in 2026)

Kindle does not support EPUB natively. Here are 3 easy ways to read EPUB files on your Kindle in 2026 — including the fastest free online method.

How to Read EPUB on Kindle (3 Methods That Work in 2026)

How to Read EPUB on Kindle

Kindle is the most popular e-reader in the world, but it has one well-known limitation: it does not open EPUB files natively. If someone sends you an EPUB book, or you download one from a library or author website, Kindle will refuse to open it.

Fortunately, there are three working methods to read EPUB on Kindle in 2026. Here is each one explained clearly.

Why Kindle Does Not Support EPUB

Amazon uses its own formats — MOBI, AZW, and AZW3 — which are based on the older Mobipocket standard. For years, this was Amazon's way of keeping content tied to the Kindle ecosystem.

In September 2022, Amazon updated Send to Kindle to support EPUB files directly, which was a major step forward. But the Kindle device itself still does not open EPUB files from local storage. You still need to go through Amazon's system or convert the file.

Method 1: Send to Kindle (Supports EPUB Since 2022)

This is now the easiest method for most users.

**How it works**: Amazon's Send to Kindle service accepts EPUB files and converts them automatically for delivery to your Kindle device.

**Steps**:

  1. Go to [amazon.com/sendtokindle](https://www.amazon.com/sendtokindle) and sign in to your Amazon account.
  2. Upload your EPUB file (up to 200MB).
  3. Select which Kindle device or app should receive the book.
  4. Click Send. The book appears in your Kindle library within a few minutes.

**Pros**: Official Amazon method, no third-party tools, works on all Kindle devices and apps.

**Cons**: Requires an Amazon account and internet connection. The conversion happens on Amazon's servers, so the result depends on Amazon's converter quality.

**Best for**: Anyone with an Amazon account who wants the simplest approach.

Method 2: Convert EPUB to a Kindle-Compatible Format First

Before Send to Kindle supported EPUB, the standard approach was to convert the EPUB to MOBI or AZW3 first, then transfer it to the Kindle.

This still works and gives you more control over the output quality.

**How to convert EPUB to MOBI using Calibre**:

  1. Download and install [Calibre](https://calibre-ebook.com) (free, available for Windows, macOS, Linux).
  2. Add your EPUB file to the Calibre library.
  3. Right-click the book, select **Convert books**, choose output format **MOBI** or **AZW3**.
  4. Click OK. Calibre converts the file.
  5. Right-click the converted book, select **Open containing folder** to find the MOBI file.
  6. Connect your Kindle via USB and copy the MOBI file to the **documents** folder on the Kindle.

**Pros**: Full control over conversion settings, works offline, no Amazon account needed for the conversion step.

**Cons**: Requires installing Calibre. Extra steps compared to Method 1.

**Best for**: Users who convert many ebooks regularly and want control over quality and metadata.

Method 3: Use the Kindle App (Reads EPUB on Phone/Tablet)

If you are reading on the Kindle app for iPhone, Android, or iPad rather than a physical Kindle device, the Send to Kindle method still applies — but there is another angle worth knowing.

Most phones can read EPUB files natively without needing Kindle at all. Apple Books on iPhone and iPad opens EPUB files directly. Google Play Books on Android does the same. If your goal is to read an EPUB comfortably on your phone, you may not need Kindle involved at all.

For physical Kindle devices, Methods 1 and 2 above remain the options.

What If You Have a PDF and Want to Read It on Kindle?

This is a common situation. You have a PDF — an ebook, a research paper, a report — and you want to read it comfortably on your Kindle.

The best approach is:

  1. **Convert the PDF to EPUB first** using [Hosnet's free PDF to EPUB converter](/pdf-to-epub).
  2. Then use **Method 1** (Send to Kindle) to send the EPUB to your Kindle.

This two-step process gives you the best reading experience. PDF files on Kindle are technically supported but are notoriously uncomfortable to read — the fixed layout makes text tiny and navigation awkward. An EPUB version reflows correctly and responds to your font size settings.

[Convert your PDF to EPUB for free here](/pdf-to-epub) — no registration required.

Comparison of Methods

| Method | Difficulty | Requires Account | Works on All Kindles |

|---|---|---|---|

| Send to Kindle (EPUB) | Easy | Amazon account | Yes |

| Calibre + USB transfer | Medium | No | Yes |

| Reading in Kindle app | Easy | Amazon account | App only |

Tips for the Best Kindle Reading Experience

  • **EPUB is better than PDF on Kindle**: Always convert PDFs to EPUB before sending, for better reflow and font adjustment.
  • **Use AZW3 instead of MOBI if using Calibre**: AZW3 is the newer Amazon format and handles more complex formatting than MOBI.
  • **Check DRM**: Some EPUB files have DRM (Digital Rights Management) protection that prevents conversion. DRM-free EPUB files from your local library or purchased from non-Amazon stores can be converted freely.
  • **Send to Kindle via email**: Each Kindle device has a personal email address (found in Manage Your Content and Devices on Amazon). You can email EPUB and MOBI files to that address and they appear on your Kindle automatically.

Summary

Kindle does not open EPUB files from local storage, but you have three practical options:

  1. **Send to Kindle** — easiest, upload EPUB to amazon.com/sendtokindle
  2. **Calibre conversion** — most control, convert to MOBI/AZW3 and transfer via USB
  3. **Kindle app** — use phone/tablet instead; or better, use Apple Books/Google Play Books which read EPUB natively

If you are starting from a PDF, [convert it to EPUB first](/pdf-to-epub) for a dramatically better reading experience on any device.

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