10 printable pages
Reading Trackers
A quiet shelf for the books you finish.
Reading tracker pages help you log the books you start, finish, and want to return to. Capture ratings, favourite quotes, and short reflections instead of letting books blur together.
Yearly Reading Log
A page for logging every book read this year with title, author, format, and rating.
Currently Reading Page
A small page for the two or three books you are reading right now and where you left off.
To-Be-Read List
A page for capturing books you want to read next, with a column for the recommendation source.
Book Review Page
A one-page review template with summary, favourite quote, rating, and a "would I re-read" note.
Reading Challenge Tracker
A page for tracking a custom reading challenge with twenty-four prompt squares.
Library Loan Tracker
A page for tracking library loans, due dates, and renewal dates so you stop paying late fees.
Series Tracker
A page for tracking long book series with checkboxes, publication years, and notes.
Quote Collection Page
A page for collecting favourite quotes with the source book and page number.
Book Club Page
A page for book club meetings with discussion prompts, member ratings, and notes.
Twelve-Books-a-Year Tracker
A minimalist page for the one-book-a-month reading habit with a slot per month.
About the Reading Trackers collection
The Reading Trackers collection on PlannerPages is built for adults who want a paper-based system without committing to a full pre-printed planner from a stationery brand. Each page in this category stands alone: print one, try it for a week, and decide whether the layout fits the way you actually think.
Every page in the collection is sized for both US Letter and A4 paper, with binding-friendly margins. The pages are designed to print cleanly on inkjet and laser printers in colour or grayscale, so you can keep your printer settings on draft and still get a usable page.
If you are new to paper planning, start with the simplest page in the list — the one with the fewest fields. The most common mistake is printing the most ambitious layout first, then giving up after three days because the page is doing too much. Build the habit first, then move to a denser page when the simpler one stops being enough.