I'm saving a fortune every month by switching to digital magazines - and I'm enjoying them more ever


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I've always been something of a heavy consumer when it comes to magazines. I love keeping on top of the latest news that relates to my various hobbies, and magazines are a great way to do that.
I love cars. I'm also a motorhome fanatic, and I love spending time on narrowboats, so magazines really help me stay connected to the various industries and trends that fuel my passions.
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Hide AdI also often use magazines to learn more about the countryside, as I'm passionate about nature and rural affairs. I could sit for hours with a copy of BBC Countryfile magazine, and Farmers Guardian is one of my guilty pleasures.
The trouble is, as we all know, magazines are expensive. Take the current crop of car magazines I'm hooked on, for example. A weekly copy of Auto Express costs £4.50, and I do like to thumb through Autocar, but that's £4.75 per week.
Top Gear Magazine has always been my monthly favourite, and that's £5.99. I'd hate to stop reading the wonderful Evo magazine but that's £6.50 per month and that's before I occasionally treat myself to a copy of Octane, which is £5.99.
Motorhome magazines cost a similar amount, while the superb Waterways World is a fiver. Countryfile Magazine costs £5.99 and even Farmers Guardian sets me back £4.10.
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And then I discovered a service called Readly. Every magazine I've mentioned above is uploaded to Readly and its users have full access to all of them, along with another 7,500 UK publications, including newspapers.
And, to read each one, to spend as long as you like thumbing through them on your phone, tablet, or computer, wherever you are in the world, you just have to pay a subscription fee.
Readly charges £12.99 per month for full access to all these titles. So if I'd bought a month's worth of Auto Express editions, one Top Gear, and four copies of the Sunday Telegraph, I'd have spent £36. Nearly three times the cost of a Readly subscription.
Even if I'd taken up the very tempting offers of subscription deals from each of the publishers I would still be saving a small fortune by signing up to Readly. And I'd get all the other mags I love with Readly as part of the package.
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Hide AdIt gets even better than that, though. Readly has offered our readers a special offer with a reduced monthly rate and two months free.
For your first year of Readly membership you get a two-month free trial, then you pay a reduced rate of £11.69 for the first 10 months. And you can cancel any time.
Even disregarding the free two months, an average household that reads, say two monthly magazines and one newspaper per week would be quids in. And that's before all the other free copies of all the other publications on the platform are taken into account.


Don't get me wrong, there's something lovely about picking up a printed magazine or newspaper. Holding a glossy magazine in your hand, and having it on your coffee table ready to pick up during any idle moment, is always going to be a joy.
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Hide AdBut it's a privilege I've been finding it harder and harder to budget for, especially since discovering Readly.
The Readly apps make it very easy to thumb through each title, with pinch-zoom functions, article selection, and quick-scrolling options. It's less accomplished on a computer screen, but it works brilliantly on handheld devices.
I must admit, it took a while to get used to loading up magazines on a tablet, rather than flicking through physical pages, but that's the beauty of the two-month free trial. If it doesn't work for you, just go back to printed media.
If anything, I've got a bit of an issue with content overload now. There's so much to go at on Readly that I could spend hours absorbing it all.
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Hide AdBut a consequence of this is I can now flick through magazines that cover topics I only have a fleeting interest in because I haven't paid the cover price, and I can afford to cherry-pick just a few articles relevant to me. I no longer need to feel like I'm trying to get my money's worth.
Switching to digital reading has been an interesting journey. As much as I miss printed media I do enjoy having more choice. And I love not having to weigh up whether I can afford picking up that alluring copy of T3 magazine ahead of a train journey. I can just spend the money on a posh coffee instead, which is always a treat.