National Book Tokens, in continued partnership with Read for Good, has launched its annual Schools Prize, inviting teachers, librarians, parents and communities to nominate schools to win funding to revitalise their libraries with new books.
Now in its twelfth year, the campaign will award five major prizes of £1,000/€1,000 in National Book Tokens gift cards. In 2026, to coincide with the UK’s National Year of Reading, the initiative expands further, introducing weekly spot prizes of £100/€100 to one school each week between 6 May and 24 June – more than doubling the number of schools able to expand their library collections this year.
Winning schools can spend their gift cards at participating bookshops across the UK and Ireland, with expert support available to help select books suited to pupils’ needs. Nominations are open until 8 July 2026, with the five main winners announced in September 2026. Meanwhile, weekly winners will be revealed via National Book Tokens’ channels.
The initiative continues to build on the longstanding partnership between National Book Tokens and Read for Good, including the successful Readathon® programme, bringing books and storytelling to children in hospitals and schools across the UK.
Both organisations share a commitment to reading for pleasure, which is linked to improved academic outcomes, enhanced wellbeing, and the development of empathy and other vital life skills, according to research by the National Literacy Trust.
Recent Read for Good research highlights a continued fall in the number of school libraries and, where they do still exist, they face significant funding challenges in maintaining well-stocked libraries with modern and appealing books, with teachers consistently citing lack of funding as the main barrier to improvement.
As one teacher explains: “School budgets are increasingly tight and to complete the refresh we need to, we just don’t have the funds. To have the greatest impact our book stocks need a complete overhaul and to do this we need financial support.” Another adds: “Books are outdated and scruffy. The school budget is stretched, and it has not been a priority for spending.”
Despite these challenges, library engagement remains strong where provision exists, with, according to recent findings by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, 64% of 5–10-year-olds and 58% of 11–15-year-olds visiting a library in the past year, demonstrating continued demand for accessible and engaging reading spaces, which the Schools Prize has met with impressive results.
Since the prize began in 2014, 28 schools across England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland have collectively received £60,000 in funding. Schools have used the awards to rebuild underfunded libraries, stock new spaces, and broaden collections to better reflect and support all pupils – including books for dyslexic and autistic readers, graphic novels and comics, and pupil-selected reading materials.
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