Read, Track, Earn: Plano Public Library's Summer Reading Program Runs Through July 31
Plano Public Library's Summer Reading Program runs May 30–July 31 with prizes, teen workshops, and goals for every age group.
Plano Public Library's Summer Reading Program runs May 30–July 31 with prizes, teen workshops, and goals for every age group.

If your household has not yet logged into Plano Public Library’s Summer Reading Program, you still have time — but the window closes July 31, 2026. The program launched May 30 and runs at all Plano Public Library branches, giving residents of every age a structured reason to keep reading through the hottest weeks of a North Texas summer.
The setup is straightforward: track your reading, hit your goal, earn prizes. For children and teens up to age 16, the target is 1,000 minutes of reading. For participants 16 and older, the bar is five books. Both tracks accept reading in any format, which means audiobooks, e-books, and physical copies all count toward progress.
Plano’s program is one of the few municipal reading initiatives that genuinely spans the full household. A kindergartner logging picture books, a middle schooler working through a novel series, and a parent catching up on nonfiction can all participate simultaneously — each with their own goal, each earning their own prizes. That design is intentional, and it makes the library a useful anchor point for families trying to build a summer routine that does not cost anything.
Branch locations across Plano are running the program concurrently, so distance from any single building is not a barrier. The city’s library system has multiple branches, and program materials and tracking are available through the library’s online portal as well as in person.
For Plano teenagers, the summer library calendar extends past reading logs into hands-on skill-building. Through July, the library is offering multi-day programs in filmmaking, entrepreneurship, financial literacy, and career exploration. These are not one-off presentations — they are structured, multi-session workshops designed to give teens something substantive to walk away with.
The filmmaking track is a practical introduction to production and storytelling. The entrepreneurship and business skills programs address how to build and pitch an idea, with financial literacy woven into the curriculum. Career exploration sessions are aimed at teens who want exposure to professional paths before they have to commit to one.
All of these programs run through Plano Public Library branches, and the same official site that handles Summer Reading registration carries the details on teen program schedules and enrollment.
With July 31 as the hard stop, households that have not started yet are looking at roughly four weeks. That is enough time for a motivated reader of any age to hit the 1,000-minute mark — roughly 33 minutes a day — or clear five books if they read at a moderate pace. It is not enough time to put it off much longer.
For parents with kids who have been out of school since late May, the program provides something structured during a stretch of summer that can turn formless quickly. The prize incentives give younger readers a concrete payoff, and the format is flexible enough that a family road trip or a week at a sports camp does not have to derail progress.
Teen workshops have their own enrollment timelines, so checking the library’s calendar sooner rather than later is worth the few minutes it takes.
The program is free. The prizes are real. Four weeks is a workable window if you start this week.
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