On April 5, 2026, Brazil’s federal Ministry of Education (MEC) launched a free digital library featuring a wide range of books. The initiative aims to democratize access to reading for all citizens.
What is MEC Livros?
It is a public, free digital platform offering about 8,000 books, both national and international. The library includes classics, bestsellers, new releases, and various literary genres, aimed at students, teachers, and general readers.
For university student João Pedro Oliveira, MEC Livros revives a culture that has been fading by bringing readers closer to the traditional library experience.
“It’s a wonderful proposal… What’s most interesting, in my view, is that it imitates a library. I think that’s a culture that has been largely lost nowadays.”
The student also highlights the variety of the catalog as a strong point, noting that it can attract different reader profiles.
In a country where access to books is still shaped by economic inequalities, public initiatives to encourage reading become essential for forming new readers.
The platform’s launch comes at a concerning moment for reading in Brazil. Data from Retratos da Leitura no Brasil, one of the country’s main national surveys on reading habits, conducted by Fundação Itaú — a private foundation linked to one of Brazil’s largest financial institutions — between April and July 2024, indicate that only 47% of the population is considered readers, while 53% had not read a single book in the three months prior to the study.
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