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World of Software > News > Read for Less: Here’s How to Find Free Ebooks and Add Them to Your Kindle
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Read for Less: Here’s How to Find Free Ebooks and Add Them to Your Kindle

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Last updated: 2026/01/17 at 8:25 AM
News Room Published 17 January 2026
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Read for Less: Here’s How to Find Free Ebooks and Add Them to Your Kindle
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Amazon has a tight grip on the ereader market; more than half of our picks for best ebook readers are Kindles. They’re must-have devices for voracious readers, but they are closely tied to Amazon’s ecosystem. If you have a Fire tablet or a smartphone, you can download other e-reading apps to beef up your library, but with the Kindle hardware, you’re pretty much stuck to getting your content directly from Amazon. Well, sort of. Using a bit of free software, you can take ebooks in a variety of formats and zap them over to your Kindle. Here’s how to do it.


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Upload Via ‘Send to Kindle’

Amazon offers a Send to Kindle page where you can upload ebook files saved on your device. Click Select files from device and select the book you want on your Kindle.

Upload Via 'Send to Kindle'

(Credit: Amazon/PCMag)

This tool supports PDF, DOC, DOCX, TXT, RTF, HTM, HTML, PNG, GIF, JPG, JPEG, BMP, and EPUB formats on ebooks up to 200MB in size. (Amazon no longer supports sending new Mobi files.) A status bar will appear, letting you keep tabs on the upload. When it’s ready, there will be a checkmark and an In library notice.

Upload Via 'Send to Kindle' files uploaded note

(Credit: Amazon/PCMag)

Amazon also has an app for Windows and macOS that lets you do the same thing, as does a Chrome extension, though results are mixed on the latter. Keep in mind that Amazon has discontinued the ability to download ebooks to your computer.


Send Ebooks to the Kindle From Your Phone

If you have the Kindle app installed on your iPhone or Android device, you can add ebooks to your library with a few taps. In the example below, I downloaded an ebook from Project Gutenberg on my iPhone, which saved it to the Files app. I then long-pressed on the ebook, selected Share, and picked the Kindle app in the menu. It then appeared in my library in the Kindle app as well as on my Kindle Paperwhite. The process is similar on Android.

Send E-Books to Your Kindle Using the ios app

Sending an ebook to the Kindle on iOS (Credit: Amazon/PCMag)


Find Your Kindle Email

Amazon also lets you email ebooks to your Kindle account via a specially crafted email address. To find your Kindle’s email address, go to amazon.com/myk on the web (or Account & Lists > Content Library > Devices). Find the relevant Kindle device, click it, and select your ereader.

Aamazon's Manage Your Content and Devices page

(Credit: Amazon/PCMag)

On the next page, you’ll find a Device Summary that lists your @kindle.com email address. (It’s set to a default address, but you can change it by clicking Edit.) 


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kindle email address screenshot

(Credit: Amazon/PCMag)

Back up top, click the Preferences tab and scroll down to Approved Personal Document E-mail List. The email attached to your Amazon account should be listed here. If that’s the email address you’ll be using to send ebooks to your Kindle, you’re all set. To use a different email, click Add a new e-mail address and enter the one you want to use.

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Send a PDF to Your Kindle

Amazon can automatically convert PDFs into the Kindle format, but you get two formatting choices. If I want my Kindle to display every page in the PDF as if it were a graphic, I can just email the file to my Kindle’s address (without a subject line), upload it via Send to Kindle, or drag and drop the file onto my Kindle if it’s attached to my PC with a USB cable. It’ll appear on my Kindle like it would on a laptop, maintaining the formatting and graphics, though the font size may be too small to read.

Your other option is to attach the PDF file to an email, and make the subject line “convert”—just that word. If I send it to my Kindle email address, the file will be converted into a Kindle version that will let me mark it up and change the formatting. The graphics will still be in there, though you’ll lose the layout of the original PDF.

house tiktok bill side by side in PDF format and kindle converted

An unaltered PDF (left) and converted PDF (right) on the Kindle (Credit: Amazon/PCMag)


Where Do My Ebooks Show Up?

Once you’ve emailed a book, go Home > From Your Library on your Kindle. It might take a few minutes, but it should update automatically and the ebook will appear—as long as you’re connected to Wi-Fi. Want to get rid of the ebook? Tap the three dots on the bottom right of your ebook in Your Library and select Remove download to remove it from your Kindle or Permanently Delete to remove it from your Amazon account.


Where Do I Get Free Ebooks?

  • Amazon hosts periodic Stuff Your Kindle Days, where select ebooks are free for a 24-hour period (or more). Here’s a list of those coming up in 2026.

  • To hook into public library catalogs and send ebooks to your Kindle, check out the Libby app from OverDrive. (Hoopla offers a similar service.)

  • If you want classics, Project Gutenberg has 75,000+ copyright-free ebooks.

  • For historical and academic texts, check out archive.org.

  • ManyBooks.net has a mix of free and paid classics and self-published titles.

  • Free-Ebooks.net has a large collection of self-published ebooks and classics; provide your email address to get five free ebooks per month.

  • If you like science fiction, the publisher Baen also has a set of free ebooks.

  • BookBub has a free ebook section filled with romance novels and other casual reads.

How to get the most out of your Kindle

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How to get the most out of your Kindle

About Our Expert

Chloe Albanesius

Chloe Albanesius

Executive Editor, News


Experience

I started out covering tech policy in DC for The National Journal, where my beat included state-level tech news and all the congressional hearings and FCC meetings I could handle. I later covered Wall Street trading tech before switching gears to consumer tech. I now lead PCMag’s news coverage and manage our how-to content.

Getting my start in DC means I still have a soft spot for tech policy; Congressional hearings can sometimes be as entertaining as a Bravo reality show, for better or worse. But PCMag is all about the technology we use every day, as well as keeping an eye out for the trends that will shape the industry in the years ahead (or flop on arrival). I’ve covered the rise of social media, the iOS vs. Android wars, the cord-cutting revolution that’s now left us with hefty streaming bills, and the effort to stuff artificial intelligence into every product you could imagine. This job has taken me to CES in Vegas (one too many times), IFA in Berlin, and MWC in Barcelona. I also drove a Tesla 1,000 miles out west as part of our Best Mobile Networks project. Of late, my focus is on our hard-working team of reporters at PCMag, guiding and editing their robust coverage of satellite internet efforts, electric vehicles, the latest cyberattacks, AI, and more.

I wouldn’t consider myself an early adopter; I hung on to my iPhone XR until I traded up to an iPhone 15. My aging Apple Watch Series 4 was finally replaced by a Series 10 last year. On the desktop, it’s all Windows for me. I’ve tried macOS, but alas it is not for me.

Latest By Chloe Albanesius

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