17 Oct 2025

'Covid killed the magazine: Reader's Digest discontinues print edition, moves solely to online

5:42 pm on 17 October 2025
SAN ANSELMO, CA - AUGUST 17: A copy of Reader's Digest magazine is displayed on a rack at a grocery store August 17, 2009 in San Anselmo, California. Citing weak advertising revenue, the publisher of Reader's Digest announced today that it will file a pre-arranged Chapter 11 bankruptcy and plans to swap nearly $1.6 billion in debt for partial ownership of the company.   Justin Sullivan/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by JUSTIN SULLIVAN / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

A copy of Reader's Digest magazine is displayed on a rack at a grocery store back in 2009. Photo: JUSTIN SULLIVAN / AFP

Encountered by many New Zealanders at airports, coffee shops or grandparents homes, Reader's Digest has announced it will stop publishing a printed edition after 75 years in Aotearoa.

Reader's Digest will now only be available online, with the Covid-19 pandemic blamed for the demise of the printed version.

Sheron White, the general manager of publish and sales for Asia Pacific Reader's Digest confirmed to Checkpoint the print edition had been discontinued.

"We tried everything to keep it going but it just wasn't feasible anymore," White said.

Reader's Digest first took off in the United States and spread across the world, including New Zealand. At its height, White said the magazine was in 51 countries and printed in 21 different languages.

But in recent years, those numbers had come down a lot. White said at its peak between 100,000 to 150,000 copies were being sold in New Zealand, but after the Covid-19 pandemic this had dropped to about 30,000.

"Covid killed the magazine," White said, noting the magazine was often sold and read at airports and during flight travel which came to a screeching halt in 2020.

White said one positive of the magazine now being only available online was it would now be free to access. She said at this stage they had about 90,000 people in New Zealand who subscribed to the email newsletter.

"Our content hasn't changed much over the years. We tried to write stories that were short, inspiring, make you laugh, make you cry... we try to make the stories hopeful even if it is about a sad topic."

White remembered some of their best-selling editions had been ones that had cover stories involving anything to do with the royal family. She said another big one had been an edition speaking about former Top Gear presenter Richard Hammond being in a near fatal crash in 2006.

Britain's King Charles III (L) walks with his son Britain's Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex as they arrive at St George's Chapel inside Windsor Castle on September 19, 2022, ahead of the Committal Service for Britain's Queen Elizabeth II. Monday's committal service is expected to be attended by at least 800 people, most of whom will not have been at the earlier State Funeral at Westminster Abbey. (Photo by David Rose / POOL / AFP)

Royal family stories always did well, White said. (File photo) Photo: AFP / David Rose

More recently, White said and edition last year that had done well had a cover story about someone's mother getting scammed out of all her money.

The discontinuation of the print edition had been advertised in newspapers, social media notices and a letter had been sent out to all subscribers, White said.

"We're tying our best to be really transparent."

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