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Lexile Level Converter

Convert Lexile measures to approximate year/grade levels for both AU and US systems. Free teaching calculator for lexile level converter. AU and US school systems.

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A parent brings in a book their child loves and asks whether it is appropriate for their Year 4 reading level. The spine shows 720L. Before you confirm or suggest alternatives, you need to know exactly what year level 720L corresponds to.

Lexile Level Converter
Literacy
The Lexile Framework (MetaMetrics) measures text complexity and reader ability on the same scale (L). Texts and readers are matched when their Lexile measures are within 100L of each other for comfortable reading.
Typical Australian Year Level ranges: Year 1: 200–400L · Year 4: 600–800L · Year 7: 900–1050L · Year 10: 1050–1200L.
ℹ️ Results are estimates for planning purposes. Verify with current standards and a qualified professional.

1 What this calculator does

Converts a Lexile measure (e.g. 720L) to an approximate Australian year level and age range. Works in both directions -- enter a Lexile measure to find the year level, or enter a year level to find the expected Lexile range. Shows the average Lexile range for each year level.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Year level ranges (approximate): Year 1: 200-450L | Year 2: 350-600L | Year 3: 500-750L | Year 4: 620-860L Year 5: 740-960L | Year 6: 840-1050L | Year 7: 940-1140L | Year 8: 1010-1200L Year 9: 1050-1240L | Year 10: 1080-1280L | Year 11: 1100-1320L | Year 12: 1130-1380L Match reader within +-100L of text for comfortable reading

Lexile measures are calibrated reading levels derived from text complexity (sentence length and word frequency). Each year level corresponds to a range of Lexile measures rather than a single value -- reflecting the spread of reading ability within any one year group. Matching a reader to texts within +/-100L of their own Lexile measure produces comfortable, comprehensible reading. Texts more than 250L above the reader's level are typically in the frustration zone.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Convert 720L to year level
Given: Lexile measure: 720L
Working: 720L falls within Year 4 range (620-860L) | Mid-range for Year 4 is approximately 740L | 720L is just below mid-range
Answer: Year 4 level (Age ~9-10) | Within average range for Year 4
💡 A Year 4 student reading at 720L is reading within the expected band. Comfortable independent reading for this student would be texts in the 620-820L range (720L +/- 100L).
Standard
Find appropriate Lexile range for Year 6 reader
Given: Year level: 6 | Reading level: above average
Working: Year 6 range: 840-1050L | Above average reader: upper end of range, approximately 1050L
Answer: Target Lexile: approximately 950-1050L for above-average Year 6 reader
💡 Select texts with Lexile measures of 850-1150L for independent reading (within 100L either side of 1050L). Texts at 1050-1250L are suitable for instructional reading with teacher support.
Advanced
Identify texts for a struggling Year 7 reader
Given: Year level: 7 | Reading level: below average | Student Lexile: estimated 750L
Working: Year 7 average: 940-1140L | Student at 750L is approximately 200L below year average | Comfortable zone: 650-850L
Answer: Select texts in the 650-850L range -- Year 5-6 level content but higher-interest themes
💡 A struggling Year 7 reader needs texts at Year 5 reading complexity but Year 7 interest level. Look for high-interest/low-readability texts designed for older readers -- a growing range of these are available from Australian publishers.

4 Sanity check

Lexile matching rule
Match reader within +-100L for comfortable independent reading | +-250L for instructional reading with support
More than 250L above the reader's level is the frustration zone.
Year level Lexile ranges (Australian approximation)
Year 3: 500-750L | Year 5: 740-960L | Year 7: 940-1140L | Year 10: 1080-1280L
These ranges are wider than the US grades they are based on -- all year levels contain a wide spread of readers.
Negative Lexile measures (BR)
BR (Below Reader) levels are used for very early readers: BR200 means 200L below the baseline | Common in Year K-1 materials
Lexile does not measure content suitability
A 1200L text is complex but could be about any topic -- appropriate complexity does not mean age-appropriate content
Always read or vet the content yourself before assigning to students.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Using Lexile as the only measure of text suitability Treating readability as the only relevant factor Assigning texts that are syntactically accessible but thematically inappropriate for the age group Lexile measures reading complexity only -- not content. A thriller written at 800L may be perfectly within a Year 4 reader's Lexile range but unsuitable for 9-year-olds due to content. Always evaluate content separately from complexity.
Assuming the same Lexile applies across all text types Comparing the Lexile of a novel to the Lexile of an information text Students underperform on information texts at their fiction Lexile level -- different text types present different challenges Students typically read fiction 150-300L above their non-fiction comprehension level because narrative structures provide more context clues. Use different Lexile targets for fiction and information text.
Not checking the Lexile database for the specific edition Assuming all editions of a book have the same Lexile Different editions (adapted, illustrated, graphic novel) may have significantly different Lexile measures Check the Lexile database (lexile.com) for the specific ISBN of the edition you are using -- adaptations can differ by hundreds of Lexile points from the original.
Placing all students in a year level at the same Lexile target Treating a year level as a single target point Students reading well above or below the year average are not being appropriately challenged or supported Differentiate texts by reader Lexile, not year level Lexile. Use reading assessments (PM Benchmark, Burt Word Reading Test, running records) to establish individual student Lexile estimates.