New Data From OverDrive: Libraries Break Digital Lending Records in 2025 with Over 820 Million Checkouts and Over 1 Billion Minutes Streamed – OverDrive

Editor’s Note: Thanks to Gary Price, infoDOCKET, at Library Journal. WP AI provided the featured image. –DrWeb

From OverDrive:

In 2025, libraries around the world continued to prove their essential role in connecting communities with stories, information, and entertainment, breaking new digital lending records in the process. As the need for flexible, on-demand access to books and media continued to grow, libraries expanded their digital collections to meet readers where they are, delivering record usage across ebooks, audiobooks, digital magazines, and streaming video.

Using the Libby and Sora apps, readers borrowed more than 820 million digital titles worldwide in 2025, marking a 10.9% year-over-year increase and reflecting sustained engagement across public libraries, schools, and institutions. At the same time, academic and public libraries offering streaming video through Kanopy reached new heights, with 29.9 million plays and over 1 billion minutes streamed, reinforcing libraries’ expanding role in digital learning and entertainment.

This growth translated into meaningful milestones for library systems and readers alike. For the first time, more than 200 library systems, consortia, and school libraries surpassed one million digital checkouts, signaling both the scale of digital adoption and the trust communities place in libraries to provide equitable, cost-free access to high-quality content.

2025 digital lending records from the Libby and Sora global network:

  • Total digital checkouts from libraries and schools: 820.5 million (+10% YoY)
    • Ebooks borrowed: 379.4 million (+3%)
    • Audiobooks borrowed: 315.9 million (+13%)
    • Magazines borrowed: 125.1 million (+31%)
    • Comics borrowed: 55.7 million (+22%)
    • Adult titles borrowed: 520.4 million (7%)
    • Children and Young Adult titles borrowed: 174.6 million (+9%)
  • Public library checkouts: 737.6 million (+9%)
  • School checkouts: 63.4 million (+14%)
  • Libby installs: 9.8 million (+3%)
  • New Kanopy users: 3.6 million (+41%)

2025 streaming records from Kanopy:

  • Plays: 29.9 million (+8%)
  • Total minutes streamed: 1.05 billion (+10%)

Top Ten Ebooks by Digital Checkouts of 2025:

  • The Women by Kristin Hannah
  • The Let Them Theory by Mel Robbins
  • The Wedding People by Alison Espach
  • Onyx Storm by Rebecca Yarros
  • Great Big Beautiful Life by Emily Henry
  • Sunrise on the Reaping by Suzanne Collins
  • The God of the Woods by Liz Moore
  • A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas
  • Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
  • Just for the Summer by Abby Jimenez
  • Top Ten Audiobooks by Digital Checkouts of 2025:

  • Onyx Storm by Rebecca Yarros
  • The Women by Kristin Hannah
  • Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
  • The Crash by Freida McFadden
  • Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
  • The Housemaid by Freida McFadden
  • The Wedding People by Alison Espach
  • Great Big Beautiful Life by Emily Henry
  • The Tenant by Freida McFadden
  • The Four Winds by Kristin Hannah
  • Top Ten Authors by Digital Checkouts of 2025:

  • Jeff Kinney
  • James Patterson
  • Freida McFadden
  • Sarah J. Maas
  • Lincoln Peirce
  • Rebecca Yarros
  • Dav Pilkey
  • Kristin Hannah
  • David Baldacci
  • Nora Roberts
  • Top 10 library systems circulating ebooks, audiobooks and digital magazines in 2025:

  • Los Angeles Public Library
  • Toronto Public Library
  • National Library Board Singapore
  • King County Library System
  • Harris County Public Library
  • Multnomah County Library
  • New York Public Library
  • San Diego County Library
  • The Free Library of Philadelphia
  • Seattle Public Library
  • Top 5 consortia circulating ebooks, audiobooks and digital magazines in 2025:

  • MELSA: Twin Cities Metro eLibrary
  • The Ohio Digital Library
  • Wisconsin Public Library Consortium
  • Indiana Digital Library
  • Maryland’s Digital Library
  • Top digital-circulating library system by country in 2025:

    • United States: Los Angeles Public Library
    • Australia: South Australian Public Library Network
    • Austria: Arbeiterkammer
    • Canada: Toronto Public Library
    • Denmark: eReolen Global
    • Germany: Verbund der Öffentlichen Bibliotheken Berlins (VÖBB)
    • New Zealand: Auckland Libraries
    • Singapore: National Library Board Singapore
    • Switzerland: Aubora OverDrive
    • United Kingdom: The Libraries Consortium

    18 library systems, consortia, and school libraries surpassing one million digital checkouts for the first time:

    • Gwinnett County Public Library
    • Prince George’s County Memorial Library System
    • Gold Coast Libraries
    • Akron-Summit County Public Library
    • Montgomery County Library District Consortium
    • Los Angeles Unified School District
    • Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections
    • Aubora OverDrive
    • Pinellas Public Library Cooperative
    • New Orleans Public Library
    • Loudoun County Public Library
    • Boobook
    • Deschutes Public Library
    • Central Arkansas Library System
    • Plano Public Library System
    • eReolen Global
    • Boise Public Library
    • CLAMS

    Read original article: Read More

    #2025Data #DigitalLendingRecords #GaryPrice #infoDOCKET #LibraryJournal #OverDrive #TopCirculatingLibraries #TopTenAudiobooks #TopTenEBooks

    Starred Review of Well-Being in the Library Workplace: A Handbook for Managers in Library Journal

    I was delighted to come across this starred review of Well-Being in the Library Workplace: A Handbook for Managers in Library Journal. Thank you to James Rhoades for the review!

    VERDICT This important work should be part of every supervisor’s toolkit to help improve their own management skills, empower their staff, and promote a robust, responsive workplace culture. Appropriate for small and large public and academic libraries seeking to better manage organizational health.

    Access the full review.

    #bookReview #libraryJournal #starredReview #wellbeingInTheWorkplaceAHandbookForManagers

    For the Federal Workers – Editorial – Library Journal

    For the Federal Workers | Editorial

    by Hallie Rich, Oct 02, 2025 | Filed in News

    A tribute to the lasting impact of civil service

    When I was in high school, the federal agency where my dad worked for almost 25 years—the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC)—was closed. It was devastating to our family, and, for my dad, ended a career in public service marked by meaningful contributions to the American public.

    The scale of the ICC’s closure—only a few hundred employees remained when it was abolished in 1995—pales in comparison to current efforts to downsize the federal workforce. Since January, the Trump administration and its Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) have implemented widespread employee reductions. The Partnership for Public Service, a nonpartisan nonprofit with a mission to improve government, estimates that more than 199,000 civil servants have left the workforce as a result of the administration’s firings, forced relocations, and deferred resignation program.

    Although positioned as reducing “waste, fraud, and abuse,” the cuts have been more chainsaw than scalpel. For libraries, the damage to the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), Library of Congress, and National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) started with the ouster of their female leaders—Dr. Cyndee Landrum, Dr. Carla Hayden, and Dr. Colleen Shogan, respectively—and will continue with budget cuts.

    In looking at the numbers, it can be easy to lose sight of individual losses, but we shouldn’t. Earlier this year I was moved reading Michael Lewis’s latest book, Who is Government? The Untold Story of Public Service, a collection of essays celebrating the individuals quietly doing deeply consequential work. Former NARA Chief Innovation Officer Pamela Wright is featured in one, which captures the impact of her work to digitize the National Archive’s 13 billion records: “Every document, map, photograph, recording and film in the National Archives that Wright and her colleagues have scanned and transferred to the internet—accessible from a laptop in Lubbock or a smartphone in Sitka—makes the agency more democratic and more fair, which means the country is, too.”

    That same commitment to access is embedded in IMLS’s mission to advance, support, and empower the nation’s museums and libraries. Following an executive order in March calling for its elimination, IMLS staff have suffered the whiplash of being placed on administrative leave, laid off, and then called back to work.

    Yet remaining IMLS staff managed to administer outstanding grants to states over the summer and post the data from its latest annual Public Libraries Survey. Our October issue feature story, “Concerned But Committed” (pp. 16–18), documents the cascading impact of reduced services, imperiled libraries, and subsequent local job losses that IMLS cuts represent.

    With a government shutdown now in effect, workers across federal agencies, including the Library of Congress, Government Publishing Office, IMLS, and NARA, will be furloughed or, in some instances, required to report to work without pay.

    When the president fired the librarian of Congress in May, the brevity of her termination letter spoke volumes about the way the administration views the knowledge, expertise, and dedication to service that Dr. Hayden—and so many federal workers—possess.

    Asked by CBS News if she thought her firing was personal, Hayden said she did not. She’s probably right, but it sure does feel personal to me and many librarians.

    Thinking back to when my dad lost his job, our family didn’t celebrate it as advancing government efficiency; we mourned what my dad, a person who worked hard for many years on behalf of the American people, lost.

    To the civil servants whose livelihoods and work have been upended over the past nine months and who are now grappling with a government shutdown—we honor your contributions. Wright captures the meaning of federal employment when she describes the oath workers take: “That oath makes you realize that what you are doing is fundamentally important to the country, no matter what capacity you are in while working for the federal government—that your work and how you conduct yourself matters, and you need to be aware of the significance of it.”

    Updated October 2, 2025

    Hallie Rich, [email protected], Hallie Rich is Editor-in-Chief of Library Journal.

    Editor’s Note: I am proud to share this post, and of Library Journal’s stance on this vital issue now. We are in danger of losing Democracy, and it will end our libraries. They will burn books. Listen. Pay Attention. We are at the brink of authoritarianism.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: For the Federal Workers | Editorial | Library Journal

    #2025 #America #AmericanLibraries #DonaldTrump #Editorial #Education #FederalWorkers #GOP #Health #History #Libraries #Library #LibraryJournal #LibraryOfCongress #Opinion #Politics #Republicans #Resistance #Science #Shutdown2025 #Technology #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates

    The period immediately before a book's publication is always a tense one, as the first reviews trickle in. #LibraryJournal's #MarleneHarris is the first out of the gate, with a *spectacular* review:

    https://www.libraryjournal.com/review/the-bezzle-1802415

    9/

    The Bezzle

    Library Journal

    And now, we have a concurring judgment from #LibraryJournal, who yesterday published their review, which concludes: "a thought-provoking story, with a message of hope in a near-future that looks increasingly bleak":

    https://www.libraryjournal.com/review/the-lost-cause-2196385

    eof/

    The Lost Cause

    Library Journal

    "A thought-provoking story, with a message of hope in a near-future that looks increasingly bleak."

    #LibraryJournal on THE LOST CAUSE (Tor/Head of Zeus November 2023)

    https://www.libraryjournal.com/review/the-lost-cause-2196385

    The Lost Cause

    Library Journal

    Once again am reminded that I'm #middle-aged now and if I stay up until 1 am #reading I am NOT going to wake up until 8 am at the earliest.

    Grateful this morning for a spouse who correctly interprets my monosyllables and brings me #coffee.

    (What I'm reading: a book on the history of the hymn #AmazingGrace, which I will be reviewing for #LibraryJournal.)

    Gaming History at the Strong National Museum of Play | Archives Deep Dive

    When the Strong National Museum of Play opened its doors in 1982 in downtown Rochester, NY, it was built around the collections of Margaret Woodbury Strong (1897–1969), who had spent a lifetime collecting household objects—particularly those related to play, such as dolls and dollhouses. The museum’s initial mission was “to document everyday life in the northeastern United States between 1840 and 1940, which was essentially the impact of industrialization on the rising middle class.” In 2003, the museum refocused on play, play-centered objects, childhood, and education.

    Library Journal
    500: We've Run Into An Issue | Mailchimp

    "Readers will be left with a greater understanding of her impact on the U.S. political landscape and the personal and political toll of her efforts."—Another outstanding review for "Shirley Chisholm: Champion of Black Feminist Power Politics" by Anastasia Curwood in #LibraryJournal
    https://www.libraryjournal.com/review/shirley-chisholm-champion-of-black-feminist-power-politics-2164482
    Shirley Chisholm: Champion of Black Feminist Power Politics

    Library Journal