Kindle vs Kobo: Why I’m Backing the “Underdog”

I’ve owned both Kindles and Kobos over the years, and whilst Amazon’s offering remains the polished default choice, I keep coming back to Kobo despite their best efforts to make me regret it. There’s something about escaping Amazon’s walled garden that matters more than seamless shopping, even if it means accepting a slightly rougher experience.

Here’s where both actually stand in 2026, focusing particularly on the Paperwhite versus Kobo Clara Colour matchup.

For transparency, I daily the Kobo Clara Colour which I bought myself over a year ago.

Kobo Clara Colour
Recommended

Kobo Clara Colour

Less locked down, greater learning curve.

Buy now

Affiliate link: we may earn a commission if you buy, at no extra cost to you.

The Kindle Case: Polished, Powerful, and Increasingly Annoying

What Kindle Does Better

Amazon built the Kindle ecosystem to be frictionless, and it genuinely is. If you’re already buying from Amazon (and realistically, most people are), the integration is seamless. One tap purchases, instant delivery to device, and a massive store that loads quickly. It simply works.

Battery life on the Paperwhite is genuinely impressive. We’re talking weeks of reading, not the optimistic “weeks” that actually means five days. My Kobo Clara Colour, by comparison, drops noticeably after a single book and somehow loses charge even when sitting idle. It’s not like you’ll need to carry a powerbank around with you, but there’s a marked difference.

Kindle Unlimited remains the stronger subscription service if you read mainstream titles quickly. The selection is broader, updates are constant, and popular books actually appear there. Kobo Plus feels narrower and less diverse by comparison.

The reading experience itself is more polished. Progress indicators are intuitive (page numbers, time left in chapter, time left in book, percentage) and easy to cycle through. Goodreads integration is seamless if you track reading habits or participate in challenges.

If you’re considering colour e-readers specifically, the Kindle Colorsoft displays colour more crisply than the Kobo Clara Colour, which looks slightly muted in comparison. Though the Colorsoft’s launch was plagued with yellow tint issues and replacement chaos, so that advantage comes with caveats.

Where Kindle Loses Me

The ecosystem lock-in has become increasingly aggressive. No native EPUB support means converting files or staying within Amazon’s store. When you “buy” a Kindle book, you’re essentially leasing it, and that distinction matters more than people think. Especially today where everything is locked behind subscription and owning has become increasingly difficult.

Library borrowing exists, but it’s clunky. You can use Libby, but you’re browsing on your phone or laptop, then sending books to your Kindle. It works, technically, but it’s not integrated into the device itself.

Then there are the lockscreen ads. Unless you pay extra to remove them, many Kindles ship with advertisements on the lockscreen. It’s a small thing that becomes genuinely irritating, leaving a Black Mirror style taste in your mouth, over time, particularly when Kobo just shows your current book cover by default.

Most frustratingly, Amazon keeps tightening restrictions on sideloading your own files. What used to be straightforward has become increasingly awkward, pushing you back toward their store. This isn’t about piracy; it’s about reading PDFs, work documents, or legitimately purchased books from other sources without jumping through hoops.

The Kobo Argument: Messy Freedom

What Makes Kobo Worth Considering

Kobo’s killer feature is proper library integration. OverDrive is built directly into the device. You can browse, borrow, and read library books without touching your phone. If you use public libraries regularly, this alone justifies choosing Kobo. Connect to multiple library systems and your borrowing power expands significantly beyond Amazon’s offering.

Format support is genuinely open. EPUB, PDF, multiple other formats, plus Dropbox integration for quick sideloading. This flexibility matters if you read widely across sources or maintain your own digital library outside corporate ecosystems.

The lockscreen experience feels more reader-focused. Your current book cover displays with progress indicators. No ads, no promotions, just your book waiting for you.

For graphic novels and comics, the colour on the Clara Colour adds genuine value. It’s not essential for text reading, but if you read illustrated content regularly, that splash of colour improves the experience noticeably.

The compact size of the Clara Colour makes it more portable and comfortable for extended reading sessions, though this comes down to personal preference.

Where Kobo Disappoints

Even acknowledging Kobo’s strengths, Kindle still wins on overall user experience polish. Small interface decisions, navigation flow, the general feel of using the device, Amazon simply invested more in refinement.

Battery performance can be a little weak. My Clara Colour dropped significantly after one book and loses charge when idle, which shouldn’t happen with e-ink displays. However, if you’ve never had an e-book reader before, chances are you’ll remain amazed by the battery versus a regular device.

The page numbering system feels inflated compared to Kindle’s more physical-book-like approach. This creates awkward moments in book clubs when your “page 247” doesn’t match anyone else’s. There are some settings to sort this on the device, but still.

The purchasing flow requires scanning a QR code on your phone rather than one-tap buying on device. It’s an unnecessary extra step that breaks the reading flow.

The Pocket Betrayal

Here’s what really stings: Kobo used to integrate with Pocket, meaning I could bookmark articles on my laptop or phone, and they’d sync to my Kobo for distraction-free reading. It was brilliant for long-form journalism and exactly the kind of feature that justified choosing Kobo despite its rougher edges.

Then Kobo shut it down mid-2025. No replacement, no alternative, just gone. It’s precisely the kind of decision that makes you question whether investing in their ecosystem is worthwhile when they’ll arbitrarily remove useful features.

My Honest Recommendation

For most people, Kindle remains the better all-rounder. The Paperwhite specifically offers the smoothest experience, the best battery, strongest ecosystem, and easiest buying flow.

But I keep choosing, and more importantly recommending, Kobo despite its limitations. The library integration alone saves me more than the device costs annually. The freedom to sideload any format without conversion, to own files properly rather than licensing them, and to avoid Amazon’s increasingly aggressive monetisation matters to me more than perfect polish.

The Clara Colour’s addition of colour is a small luxury, genuinely useful for comics and graphic novels, nice for book covers, and utterly unnecessary for straight text. But that little extra flair makes the device feel less utilitarian and slightly more enjoyable to pick up.

If you’re already deep in Amazon’s ecosystem, use Kindle Unlimited heavily, and rarely borrow library books, stick with Kindle. You’ll have a better experience day to day.

If you use libraries regularly, read across multiple sources, or simply prefer not feeding everything through Amazon, Kobo is the smarter choice even with its rougher edges. Just don’t get too attached to any particular feature, because they might remove it without warning.

The Pocket situation still annoys me, honestly. But I’m still using my Kobo.

Kobo Clara Colour
Recommended

Kobo Clara Colour

Less locked down, greater learning curve.

Buy now

Affiliate link: we may earn a commission if you buy, at no extra cost to you.

Written by

Marty
Martyhttps://muckrack.com/marty-goosed
Founding Editor of Goosed, Marty is a massive fan of tech making life easier. You'll often find him testing something new, brewing beer or finding some new foodie spots in Dublin, Ireland. - Find me on Threads

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