SpritzReader is a focused reading tool built for people drowning in newsletters, reports, and saved articles they never get to. We help you finish what you start — faster.
We were tired of the same cycle: save an article, tell ourselves we'll read it later, watch the backlog grow, feel guilty. Repeat.
Skimming didn't work — you lose the nuance. AI summaries strip out the author's actual argument. Bookmarking is just organized procrastination.
So we built SpritzReader around a simple insight: your eyes slow you down, not your brain. Traditional screen reading forces constant scanning — left to right, line to line, backtracking when focus drifts. RSVP eliminates all of that. Words come to you at a steady pace, your eyes stay fixed on one point, and your brain locks into a reading rhythm.
It's not a speed reading course or a habit you have to build. Paste text, press play, finish reading. That's it.
We won't promise you'll read a novel in 90 minutes. SpritzReader is best for informational reading — articles, reports, newsletters, first-pass triage. For deep study, slow down. We give you the controls for that.
150 to 900 WPM. Pause, rewind, adjust. Speed is a dial, not a setting. We built the controls because comprehension matters — and different material deserves different speeds.
Files are processed in your browser. Paste confidential memos, internal docs, client briefs without worry. Your content is yours — accessible only to your account and deleted within 30 days of account deletion.
SpritzReader uses RSVP (Rapid Serial Visual Presentation) — a technique studied in cognitive science for decades. Words appear one at a time at a fixed focal point, with the Optimal Recognition Point highlighted so your brain processes each word faster.
Most users find they can comfortably read at 2-3x their normal pace within minutes. Not because of a trick, but because you're removing the overhead of eye movement and letting your brain do what it's already good at: processing language.
We're not going to overclaim. RSVP works best for informational, first-pass reading. It won't replace sitting down with a physical book on a Sunday afternoon — and it shouldn't. But for everything else in your reading backlog? It changes the game.
No account required. Paste an article or drop a PDF — see how it feels in 30 seconds.