I had a student in Milan. Greek guy, studied Farsi for a year. who could conjugate verbs in five tenses but couldn’t read a restaurant menu in Tehran. He’d learned grammar from a textbook and vocabulary from flashcards, but he’d never actually read connected text in Persian. When he finally sat down with a children’s story in Farsi, he realized that reading isn’t just decoding words. it’s processing meaning at speed, handling unknown words from context, and not panicking when a sentence runs longer than anything in his textbook.
Reading is the skill that multiplies all your other skills. It reinforces grammar in context. It builds vocabulary passively. you encounter words in real sentences instead of isolated flashcard pairs. It trains your eye to process Persian script at speed. And unlike conversation, you can do it alone, at your own pace, at 2 AM in your pajamas.
The problem: there’s almost nothing online for Farsi learners between “the cat sat on the mat” and actual Persian literature. Textbooks have simple dialogues. Native content has Ferdowsi. The middle ground. graded, level-appropriate texts that are actually interesting. barely exists.
This series fills that gap. Every post below contains real Persian text (not simplified-to-death textbook extracts) with vocabulary support, cultural notes, and comprehension questions. Start at your level. Read for meaning, not perfection.
Before You Start: Can You Read the Script?
These texts assume you can read Persian script, even slowly. If you can’t yet, start with the Persian alphabet guide. you can learn to decode the script in 1-2 weeks. You don’t need to be fast. You just need to be able to sound out words.
If you can read script but find it painfully slow, that’s normal. Speed comes from practice. and reading graded texts is exactly that practice. The A2 passages below use common vocabulary and short sentences specifically so your reading speed can build up without your brain overheating.
A2: Beginner Reading
Short texts (100-200 words each) using high-frequency vocabulary. Simple sentences, present and past tense only. Every passage includes a word list and comprehension questions.
5 Easy Persian Passages for A2 Learners. Five short texts about everyday topics: introducing yourself, describing your city, talking about family, a trip to the bazaar, and a day at school. Each passage uses only the top 300 most common Persian words. Full vocabulary list with each text.
Persian Fables Retold in Simple Farsi. Classic Iranian fables rewritten in simple modern Farsi. Mullah Nasreddin stories, animal fables from Kelileh va Demneh, and folk tales that every Iranian knows. These stories are part of the culture. knowing them gives you reference points for conversations with native speakers.
Reading a Persian Restaurant Menu: Practice + Vocab. A real Iranian restaurant menu broken down word by word. Dish names, ingredients, cooking methods, and the descriptions you’ll see in actual restaurants. Practical reading practice you can use on your next trip to Iran or your next visit to a Persian restaurant anywhere in the world.
B1: Intermediate Reading
Longer texts (300-500 words) with more complex grammar. compound sentences, subjunctive, passive constructions. Vocabulary expands beyond the basic 500 words. Some texts include both formal and spoken forms.
Persian News for Learners: 5 Simplified Articles. Real news stories from Iranian media, simplified to B1 level. Topics: a scientific discovery, a sports event, a cultural festival, an economic report, and a human interest story. Each article preserves the formal news register but reduces sentence complexity. Good practice for the formal Persian you’ll encounter in writing.
5 Persian Short Stories for Intermediate Learners. Original short fiction written at B1-B2 level, set in modern Iran. A taxi driver in Tehran, a grandmother in Isfahan, a student studying abroad, a shopkeeper in the bazaar, a family at Nowruz. Each story uses natural dialogue alongside narrative prose, so you practice both registers.
Reading Iranian Social Media: Instagram Farsi Decoded. Real Instagram captions and comments from Iranian accounts, annotated with vocabulary and cultural context. This is the most casual register of Persian. abbreviations, Fingilish (Farsi written in Latin script), slang, emojis used in Iranian-specific ways. Reading social media trains you for the Persian you’ll actually encounter online.
B1-B2: Poetry and Literature
Persian Poetry for Readers: 5 Poems Line-by-Line. Five accessible Persian poems with word-by-word breakdowns, literary analysis, and cultural context. Starts with modern poets (Forough Farrokhzad, Sohrab Sepehri) whose language is closer to contemporary Farsi, then works up to Hafez. Poetry is where Persian becomes art. and understanding even one ghazal gives you cultural currency that impresses native speakers.
B2: Advanced Reading
How to Read a Persian Novel: A Non-Native Guide. A practical guide to reading your first full-length book in Persian. Which novels are most accessible for non-native readers, how to handle unknown vocabulary without losing the plot, the specific challenges of literary Persian (archaic forms, regional dialogue, stream-of-consciousness), and a recommended reading order from easiest to hardest. Includes excerpts from 5 novels with annotations.
How to Read Effectively
Reading in a foreign language is a skill with its own techniques. Here’s what works:
Don’t look up every word. If you stop every sentence to check a dictionary, you’re not reading. you’re translating. Try to get the meaning from context first. Only look up a word if it appears 3+ times and you still can’t guess it, or if it’s clearly the key word of the passage.
Read the whole text first, then re-read. Your first pass should be for general meaning. What’s the text about? What happened? Your second pass is for details and vocabulary. This mirrors how your brain naturally processes language. global before local.
Read out loud. Especially at A2-B1 level. Reading aloud forces your brain to process the script, produce the sounds, and hear the words simultaneously. It’s three skills in one exercise. Slow is fine. Accuracy matters more than speed.
Track your progress. Note how many unknown words per paragraph. If it’s more than 5 in a short paragraph, the text is too hard. If it’s 0-1, it’s too easy. The sweet spot is 2-3 unknown words per paragraph. enough challenge to learn, not so much that you’re lost.
Build a reading habit. Ten minutes daily beats one hour weekly. Your brain consolidates reading skills during sleep, so frequent short sessions are more effective than marathon study days. The science of learning series explains why spaced practice works.
From Reading to Active Vocabulary
Reading builds passive vocabulary. you recognize words when you see them. To convert that to active vocabulary (words you can use in speech and writing), you need one extra step: review.
When you encounter a useful new word while reading, add it to your review system. ZabanYar lets you import vocabulary from any text. paste a passage, and the app identifies words above your current level and creates spaced-repetition flashcards automatically. That’s the bridge between “I’ve seen this word” and “I can use this word.”
The grammar reference helps when you encounter structures you don’t recognize. The food vocabulary guide is particularly useful alongside the menu reading post.
The Full Reading Practice Index
| Text | Level | Type | Words per Passage |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 Easy Passages | A2 | Everyday topics | 100-200 |
| Persian Fables | A2 | Folk tales | 150-250 |
| Restaurant Menu | A2-B1 | Practical | Full menu |
| News for Learners | B1 | News articles | 300-400 |
| Short Stories | B1 | Fiction | 400-600 |
| Instagram Farsi | B1 | Social media | 50-150 per post |
| Poetry Line-by-Line | B1-B2 | Poetry | Varies |
| Reading a Novel | B2 | Guide + excerpts | Full guide |
FAQ
Where can I find easy Persian texts for beginners?
How long does it take to read fluently in Persian?
Should I read Persian with or without short vowel marks?
What’s the best first book to read in Persian?
Can reading Persian help improve my speaking?
Reading is the quiet skill. nobody sees you doing it, nobody applauds when you finish a paragraph. But it’s the skill that makes all the other skills work better. Start with the A2 passages. Read one a day. For free graded Persian texts, Wikisource’s Farsi portal has public-domain literature at various difficulty levels. Within a month, you’ll notice that Persian text no longer looks like a wall of connected curves. it looks like words. That shift changes everything.
Found new words while reading? Paste any Persian text into ZabanYar and it creates flashcards for words above your level. Turn every reading session into a vocabulary session automatically.
