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Quick answer: The Kindle app cannot open EPUB files directly. Send to Kindle converts your EPUB into Amazon's own format, which can change fonts and layout and will not work for DRM-protected EPUBs. If you own DRM-free EPUBs and want to read them exactly as they are, a dedicated EPUB reader on iPhone opens them natively, with no conversion and no Amazon account required.
A lot of books you can buy or download are EPUB files: Humble Bundle, Standard Ebooks, indie authors, Project Gutenberg, direct-from-publisher purchases. If you live in the Kindle app, those files are awkward, because Kindle was never built to read EPUB. Here is the honest situation in 2026 and the simplest way around it.
Can the Kindle app open EPUB files?
No. The Kindle app on iPhone and iPad does not open an .epub file directly. There is no "open in Kindle" that reads the EPUB as-is. To get an EPUB into Kindle at all, you have to run it through Amazon's Send to Kindle, which changes the file.
What Send to Kindle does to your EPUB
Since 2022, Send to Kindle accepts EPUB files by email, web upload, or the iOS share sheet. But it does not keep them as EPUB. Amazon's service converts the EPUB into its own Kindle format (AZW3/KFX) before it lands in your library. A few things follow from that:
- The book you read is a converted copy, not your original EPUB.
- Conversion can substitute fonts and reflow or break carefully designed layouts.
- Fixed-layout and heavily styled EPUBs often come through worst.
- DRM-protected EPUBs (for example library loans) cannot be sent or converted at all.
- Amazon ended MOBI support for Send to Kindle in December 2023, so that older path is gone too.
In other words, the Kindle route works for plain EPUBs in a pinch, but it always means handing your file to a conversion pipeline and reading Amazon's version of it.
When converting to Kindle is a problem
If you just want the words and do not care about presentation, conversion is tolerable. It becomes a real problem when you care about how the book looks, when the EPUB uses custom fonts or careful typography, when it is a technical or illustrated book with a fixed layout, or when you simply do not want your library locked into one company's format and account. For DRM-free books you legally own, there is no good reason to convert them just to read them.
The simple alternative: read your EPUB as-is
A dedicated EPUB reader skips the whole conversion step. It opens your .epub file directly, in its original format, with the fonts and layout the publisher intended, and it does not need an Amazon account.
justRead is an EPUB and PDF reader for iPhone and iPad that does exactly this. Drop in an EPUB from the Files app, a cloud folder, or your Calibre library, and it opens immediately, no conversion. On top of reading the file faithfully, it adds the control Kindle does not give you for your own books: 200+ fonts plus custom font import, exact margins, per-book settings, and an automatic two-column layout on iPad. For a walkthrough of getting EPUBs onto iOS in the first place, see how to read EPUB on iPhone and iPad.
Other workarounds, and why they fall short
People try a few other routes to read EPUBs in the Kindle world, and it helps to know the tradeoffs:
- Convert with Calibre first. You can convert an EPUB to a Kindle format on a computer with Calibre, then send it over. It works, but it is an extra step every time, and you are still reading a converted copy rather than the original.
- Email it to your Kindle address. This just routes through the same Send to Kindle conversion, with the same format changes and the same block on DRM files.
- Read in a browser. Some EPUBs can be opened in a web reader, but you lose offline access and a real library.
Each of these is a way around Kindle's lack of native EPUB support. Opening the EPUB directly in a dedicated reader skips the workarounds entirely.
What about my Kindle Store books?
Be clear-eyed here: books you bought from the Kindle Store are usually DRM-protected and tied to Amazon. Those can only be read in Amazon's own Kindle app, and no third-party reader (justRead included) can open them. This guide is about the other half of your shelf, the DRM-free EPUBs you own outright. For those, you are free to use whatever reader you like, and reading them as EPUB is the cleaner choice. Many people keep the Kindle app for their Amazon purchases and a dedicated EPUB reader for everything else.
How to start
- Install a dedicated EPUB reader on your iPhone or iPad.
- Add your EPUB files from the Files app, a cloud folder, or Calibre.
- Open and read, with no conversion and no account.
Download justRead on the App Store and read your EPUBs the way they were made.
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