How Long Is My Book in Audio? Words → Hours Benchmarks by Genre

Estimate finished audiobook runtime from manuscript word counts using reliable words→hours benchmarks. This guide gives practical WPM ranges by genre, worked examples, a quick formula, and links to tools so you can plan narration, production time, and budgets with confidence.

Posted on • Reading time: ~10–14 minutes

Why convert words to hours early in production

Turning your manuscript word count into an estimated audiobook runtime is the first practical step for budgeting and scheduling. Finished hours determine narrator PFH costs, editing time, and delivery packaging. Even a rough estimate lets you model multiple cost scenarios and avoid nasty surprises later.

Quick formula: words → hours

Use this simple formula as a starting point:

Finished hours ≈ Total words ÷ (Average words per minute × 60)

Where Average words per minute (WPM) is your chosen narration pace (150–170 WPM is typical; see genre table below). For instance, 72,000 words ÷ (160 × 60) ≈ 7.5 finished hours.

Genre benchmarks (words → hours)

Different genres use different narrative rhythms—dialogue-heavy fiction often reads faster than dense non-fiction. Below are practical WPM ranges and a quick words→hours conversion guideline per genre.

Genre Typical WPM (narration) Words per finished hour (approx.) Notes
Commercial Fiction / Thriller 155–170 WPM ~9,300–10,200 Fast pacing, dialogue; trims quickly into finished hours.
Romance 150–165 WPM ~9,000–9,900 Emotion beats and dialogue; variable depending on internal monologue.
Literary Fiction 140–155 WPM ~8,400–9,300 Denser sentences; slightly slower delivery preserves nuance.
Epic Fantasy / Sci-Fi 140–160 WPM ~8,400–9,600 Worldbuilding and names slow pace; allow padding.
Memoir / Narrative Non-fiction 145–160 WPM ~8,700–9,600 Story beats with reflective pauses; pace depends on author voice.
Business / Self-Help 160–180 WPM ~9,600–10,800 Short, actionable chapters—often read faster.
Short Stories / Novella 160–175 WPM ~9,600–10,500 Short-form benefits from brisk pacing.
Children’s & Middle Grade 130–150 WPM ~7,800–9,000 Simpler language and clear enunciation; slower for younger audiences.

These benchmarks are averages. Use the Words → Hours Converter with a sample of your manuscript read at the narrator’s intended pace to get a custom estimate.

Worked examples — real math

Example A — 80,000 words, commercial fiction

Choose a mid-range WPM of 160.

Finished hours ≈ 80,000 ÷ (160 × 60) = 80,000 ÷ 9,600 ≈ 8.3 hours.

Example B — 50,000 words, business book (faster pace)

Pick 170 WPM for business/self-help.

Finished hours ≈ 50,000 ÷ (170 × 60) = 50,000 ÷ 10,200 ≈ 4.9 hours.

Example C — 120,000 words, epic fantasy

Allow slower 145 WPM due to names and worldbuilding.

Finished hours ≈ 120,000 ÷ (145 × 60) = 120,000 ÷ 8,700 ≈ 13.8 hours. Add 5–10% padding for complex pronunciations and possible scene comping.

Why words→hours estimates can be wrong — common caveats

  • Dialogue density: fast exchanges read quicker than long descriptive passages.
  • Accents, foreign words, names: slow the recording and increase raw hours per finished hour.
  • Performance choices: dramatic pauses, character voices, or multi-voice narration add time.
  • Editing style: heavy comping and many retakes increase the production ratio and can affect finished-hour estimates if additional material is inserted.

Best practice: run a 5–10 minute sample with your chosen narrator or read a short passage yourself at the target pace. Upload that sample into the Audiobook Time Calculator or Words → Hours tool to scale up for the full manuscript.

Planning production using your words→hours estimate

Once you have a finished-hours estimate you can:

  1. Calculate narrator fees (PFH × finished hours) using the Narrator Rate Calculator or your quotes.
  2. Estimate editing and mastering (post-production hours often scale with finished hours).
  3. Create a recording schedule (daily chapter targets based on narrator stamina and session length).
  4. Budget contingency for pickups and pronunciation coaching if your book has many names/terms.

Quick checklist — convert words → hours in 5 steps

  1. Get your total manuscript word count (export from your writing software).
  2. Choose a genre-appropriate WPM benchmark from the table above.
  3. Run the formula or use the Words → Hours Converter.
  4. Record a 5–10 minute sample with your narrator at the chosen pace and scale the sample to the full manuscript using the Audiobook Time Calculator.
  5. Pad the final estimate by 5–15% if your manuscript includes names, technical terms, or multi-voice scenes.

FAQs

Pages vs words?

Estimate words by multiplying pages × words-per-page (commonly 250–300 WPP for double-spaced manuscript pages), then convert to hours. When in doubt, extract the actual word count from your file—it’s more accurate than page approximations.

What about dramatized or multi-voice productions?

Dramatized productions and full-cast recordings typically increase runtime slightly (more pacing and character work) and add production overhead. Treat these projects separately and expect additional finished hours or longer raw-to-finished ratios.

How much padding should I add?

For standard prose, 5% padding is often enough. For heavy worldbuilding, many character names, or technical language, use 10–15% padding to be safe.

Ready to convert your manuscript? Try the Words → Hours Converter and the Audiobook Time Calculator for instant estimates. If you want, I can run your word count and produce a finished-hours estimate plus a conservative budget scenario—paste your word count and preferred genre and I’ll calculate it now.

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *