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Bible sales keep growing, even as many Americans lose their religion
(RNS) —About 18 million Bibles have been sold this year, part of a five-year boom in Bible sales.
A variety of New Living Translation verions of the Bible. (Photo by Tim Wildsmith/Unsplash/Creative Commons)

(RNS) — Many Americans may have lost faith in organized religion, but according to recent data, they still love the Good Book.

As of September, Bible sales were up 11% this year over 2024, part of a continuing boom in Bible sales. That includes 2.4 million sold in September 2025 as part of a surge that coincided with the death of conservative Christian activist Charlie Kirk, according to data from Circana, a company that tracks book sales. All told, more than 18 million Bibles have been sold so far this year. 

“Sales for Bibles have been steadily growing in the U.S. since 2021 and have set unprecedented annual sales records since 2022,” Brenna Connor, an industry analyst at Circana BookScan, told RNS in an email. “2024 marked a 20-year high for Bible sales in the U.S., and 2025 is on track to surpass these levels, underscoring the growing interest in religious content among U.S. consumers.”


Among the bestsellers are an economy version of the English Standard Bible — the top seller, according to Circana— the Adventure Bible for kids and the She Reads Truth Bible, named for an online community of Bible-reading women. A pink, giant-print King James Version gift Bible has been a bestseller for years. And Donald Trump earned more than $1.3 million last year for endorsing a patriotic Bible named for country singer Lee Greenwood’s song “God Bless the USA.” 

While publishers can track how many Bibles are sold, they don’t have demographic details of the buyers. But Tim Wildsmith, a former college campus minister turned author and Bible YouTuber, wonders if the tumult of the last five years, from the COVID-19 pandemic to the current political polarization, is playing a role. With the world going crazy, he said, folks may be looking for something they can rely on.



“Part of me wonders if people are just looking for something to kind of settle themselves — that spiritual looking for peace, whatever you want to call it,” he said.

At the Christian Connection bookstore in Sycamore, Illinois, a town west of Chicago, the most popular version of the Bible is the New Living Translation, especially its editions that pair with a new app from Tyndale, the NLT’s publisher. That translation is easy to read, and the app, known as Filament, makes it easy for readers to access study materials to help understand the text, said Kelli Malm, who runs the store with her mother. 

“People want the readability, especially if they’re new Christians, and if they’re younger, they can use an app,” she said. “It’s kind of a no-brainer situation for people — they’ve got a Bible and carry it around with them, and they don’t have to necessarily grab the big study Bible.”

The store has seen an uptick in sales since September, and at least one buyer said Kirk’s death prompted them to go back to church, Malm said.


She said that before September, she had no idea who Kirk was, but that God can take something terrible and redeem it. While most people who buy Bibles at the store are older, she has also seen an uptick in customers in their 30s and 40s.

“They’ve just found their faith, or they’re coming back to it,” she said.

Colton Burkhart, a freshman student at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, is on his third Bible, a MacArthur Study Bible he bought last year after wearing out a previous edition. He has it filled with colored tabs to help him find different topics, and he carries a color-coded chart for easy reference.

(Photo by Humble Lamb/Unsplash/Creative Commons)

Burkhart said he tried to read the Bible on his phone but found it too distracting. 

“I need something I can really read,” he said, adding that he likes to write notes in his Bible and highlight verses he has read.

Amy Simpson, the Bible publisher for Tyndale House Publishers, which publishes the NLT, said the company sells several hundred different editions of Bibles, often in different colors. She said no one kind of Bible is driving the growth of sales, but they are seeing growth across the board. That’s one reason publishers offer so many kinds — different versions can appeal to people of all ages.

And having so many editions of the Bible has made it easier for publishers to keep up with demand, said Melinda Bouma, a HarperCollins Christian Publishing vice president and Bible publisher for Zondervan. If one version sells out, there are many other options. HarperCollins publishes 22 translations of the Bible in English and Spanish, in hundreds of editions.


Bouma said Bible sales are up for all kinds — including kids’ Bibles. She said the NIV Study Bible, which has been out for 40 years, has seen growth and recently passed 10 million copies sold.

The Jesus Bible, an edition aimed at Gen Z readers, is also doing well, Bouma said. She has seen data showing renewed interest in faith among younger folks, and some of that interest seems to be showing up in Bible sales.

The American Bible Society’s annual State of the Bible report found that about 41% of Americans qualify as “Bible users,” meaning they have read the Bible at least three times a year outside of church services. That’s up from 38% last year but down from 2021, when 50% of Americans fit that category.

The report also found that 36% of Gen Z and 39% of millennials would qualify as Bible users — an increase for millennials over 2024, when 30% were identified as Bible users. Only 1-in-5 Americans would qualify as what the Bible Society calls “Scripture engaged,” meaning the Bible has a major role in their lives.

Jennifer Holloran, president of the ABS, said the boom in Bible sales offers a chance for churches to help congregants understand what they are reading.

“I’d go further and say churches have a real responsibility to steward this moment, not just to educate but to accompany new Bible readers along a journey of discovery, serving as both interpreters and companions in this pivotal moment,” she told RNS in an email.


Despite the boom in Bible sales, a recent survey from Gallup released Thursday (Nov. 13) found that less than half of Americans (49%) say religion is important to their lives, part of a continued documented decline in religiosity.

Wildsmith said he first started hearing that people were buying more Bibles in 2020, during COVID. So, he started reviewing Bibles on YouTube, hoping to help viewers find one that worked for them. His first review, of a Crossway ESV Heirloom single-column, personal-size Bible, got more than 18,000 views, and he eventually launched a new career as a streamer. He now has more than a quarter-million followers and more Bibles to review than he can keep up with. He eventually wrote a guide called “Bible Translations for Everyone.”

Most of his audience consists of folks who have already read the Bible and are looking for something different, he said. But a growing number of them are new to it.

The Bible boom, he said, has changed his life.

“If you had told me five years ago, when I was just kind of messing around, that this would actually be a job and something I could do, I would have thought you were crazy,” Wildsmith said. “But here we are.”



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