How Many Pages Is a 7,500-Word Essay?
A 7,500-word essay runs about 30 pages double-spaced (the default for most college assignments) or 15 pages single-spaced — using Times New Roman 12pt with 1-inch margins. Expect 33 min 20 sec of reading time and 57 min 42 sec if you read it aloud.
By spacing
| Spacing | Words per page | Total pages |
|---|---|---|
| Single-spaced | 500 | 15 pages |
| 1.5-spaced | 375 | 20 pages |
| Double-spaced (standard) | 250 | 30 pages |
By font choice (double-spaced)
| Font | Approx. pages | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Times New Roman 12pt | 30 pages | Baseline. Most assigned. |
| Arial 12pt | 32.5 pages | Slightly fewer words per page (Arial runs wider). |
| Calibri 11pt | 28.5 pages | Word's default; tighter than Times 12pt. |
| Georgia 12pt | 31.5 pages | Common readable serif; sits between Times and Arial. |
| Verdana 12pt | 35.25 pages | Wide; fewer words fit per line. |
Timing
- Reading time: 33 min 20 sec at 225 wpm (silent adult reading).
- Speaking time: 57 min 42 sec at 130 wpm (conversational pace).
Tips for hitting exactly 7,500 words
- Write 10-15% past the target on the first pass. Cutting always reads tighter than padding.
- If you're 750 words short, look for a missing counter-argument or under-explained example, not adverbs.
- If you're 750 words over, kill the throat-clearing intro sentence and any "in conclusion" wrap-up — they're usually 100+ words you don't need.
Frequently asked
How many pages is a 7,500-word essay?
Double-spaced (the assignment default) about 30 pages. Single-spaced about 15 pages.
How long does it take to read a 7,500-word essay?
Roughly 33 min 20 sec at an average reading speed of 225 words per minute.
How long would a 7,500-word speech take to deliver?
About 57 min 42 sec at a conversational 130 words per minute. Add 10-15% if you pause for emphasis.
Does font choice change the page count?
Yes, slightly. Times New Roman 12pt is the baseline. Arial 12pt fits about 8% fewer words per page; Calibri 11pt fits about 5% more.
Live word count as you write
Use the word counter and reading-time tool — it updates in real time and shows the same single/1.5/double spacing breakdown.