The 25 Best Selling Romance Books of All Time

The best selling romance books ever written. From Pride and Prejudice to modern bestsellers, these are the must-read love stories that define the genre.

2026-02-16·18 min read
romance booksbest sellerslove storiesbook recommendations

The best selling romance books have shaped how we think about love, desire, and human connection. Romance is the single highest-grossing fiction genre, generating over $1.4 billion in annual revenue, and for good reason. These novels deliver emotional depth, compelling characters, and stories that resonate across generations. Whether you are a lifelong romance reader or picking up your first love story, this list covers the must-read titles that define the genre.

From classic literary romance to contemporary page-turners dominating BookTok, these 25 books represent the best the genre has produced. Each one earned its place through a combination of critical acclaim, commercial success, and lasting reader devotion.

Browse all genres →

What Makes a Great Romance Book?

The best romance novels do more than deliver a love story. They create characters you genuinely care about, build tension that keeps you turning pages, and explore the complexity of human relationships with honesty and insight. A great romance earns its emotional payoff. The best ones make you laugh, cry, and stay up past midnight because you need to know what happens next. Whether the setting is Regency England or modern-day Brooklyn, the emotional truth is what separates a good romance from an unforgettable one.

The Best Selling Romance Books of All Time

1. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen

Pride and Prejudice cover

The novel that defined modern romance. Published in 1813, Pride and Prejudice follows Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy through misunderstandings, social pressures, and wounded pride toward one of literature's most satisfying love stories. Austen's wit is razor-sharp, her social commentary still relevant, and the chemistry between Elizabeth and Darcy remains the gold standard for romantic tension. If you read one romance novel in your life, this is the one. It has sold over 20 million copies and inspired countless adaptations, sequels, and retellings.

2. Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell

Gone with the Wind cover

Margaret Mitchell's sweeping epic of the American South during the Civil War centers on Scarlett O'Hara, one of fiction's most complex and polarizing heroines. Her tumultuous relationship with Rhett Butler is passionate, destructive, and completely unforgettable. Gone with the Wind won the Pulitzer Prize in 1937 and has sold over 30 million copies worldwide. The novel's scale and ambition set a template for epic romance that writers still follow today.

3. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte

Jane Eyre cover

Charlotte Bronte's 1847 masterpiece is a gothic romance that doubles as a feminist manifesto. Jane Eyre is poor, plain, and utterly unwilling to compromise her principles for anyone, including the brooding Mr. Rochester. The novel's exploration of class, independence, and moral courage gives the love story a depth that feels remarkably modern. The famous line "Reader, I married him" remains one of the most quoted sentences in English literature.

4. Outlander by Diana Gabaldon

Outlander cover

Diana Gabaldon created a genre-defying phenomenon when she sent World War II nurse Claire Randall back in time to 18th-century Scotland, where she meets Highland warrior Jamie Fraser. Outlander blends historical fiction, adventure, and deeply passionate romance across thousands of pages and multiple centuries. The series has sold over 50 million copies and spawned a hugely successful television adaptation. Gabaldon's meticulous historical research and emotional depth make this far more than a typical time-travel romance.

5. The Notebook by Nicholas Sparks

The Notebook cover

Nicholas Sparks became a household name with this 1996 novel about Noah Calhoun and Allie Nelson, whose summer love affair is separated by class and circumstance, only to be rekindled decades later. The Notebook is a masterclass in emotional simplicity. Sparks strips away everything except the core question: what would you do to hold onto the love of your life? The novel and its 2004 film adaptation have become touchstones for an entire generation of romance readers.

6. The Thorn Birds by Colleen McCullough

The Thorn Birds cover

This 1977 bestseller follows the Cleary family across decades in the Australian outback, centered on the forbidden love between Meggie Cleary and Father Ralph de Bricassart. The Thorn Birds is a sprawling family saga that explores sacrifice, faith, and the destructive power of unfulfilled desire. It sold over 33 million copies and remains one of the best-selling novels of the 20th century. McCullough's prose is lush and her storytelling is patient, building emotional weight that hits like a freight train.

7. It Ends with Us by Colleen Hoover

It Ends with Us cover

Colleen Hoover's 2016 novel became a cultural phenomenon years after its publication, propelled by BookTok into stratospheric sales. It Ends with Us tells the story of Lily Bloom, who falls for neurosurgeon Ryle Kincaid while grappling with the reappearance of her first love, Atlas. The novel tackles domestic violence with unflinching honesty wrapped inside a romance structure. Hoover's ability to make readers simultaneously love and question the romantic leads is what makes this book so powerful and so widely discussed.

8. The Bridges of Madison County by Robert James Waller

The Bridges of Madison County cover

This slim 1992 novel about a four-day affair between Iowa housewife Francesca Johnson and National Geographic photographer Robert Kincaid became one of the best-selling novels of the decade. Waller's prose is spare and evocative, and the story asks an uncomfortable question about whether the love of your life might arrive after you have already built one. The novel sold over 50 million copies and proved that romance fiction could dominate mainstream bestseller lists.

9. A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas

A Court of Thorns and Roses cover

Sarah J. Maas blended fairy tale retelling with high fantasy and intensely passionate romance to create a phenomenon. Feyre, a mortal huntress, is dragged into a magical realm and finds herself entangled with the powerful High Lord Tamlin. The series evolves from Beauty and the Beast retelling into something far more complex and emotionally ambitious. ACOTAR has become the defining romantasy series of its generation and a gateway book for readers discovering the fantasy romance crossover.

10. The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger

The Time Traveler's Wife cover

Audrey Niffenegger's 2003 debut novel uses time travel as a metaphor for the unpredictability of love and loss. Henry DeTamble involuntarily travels through time, appearing at different moments in the life of his wife Clare. The novel is structurally inventive and emotionally devastating, exploring how love persists across time, absence, and the certainty of loss. It spent over four years on the NYT bestseller list and has become a modern classic of literary romance.

11. Me Before You by Jojo Moyes

Me Before You cover

Jojo Moyes's 2012 novel about Louisa Clark, a quirky small-town girl who becomes caretaker to wealthy quadriplegic Will Traynor, is a love story that refuses to offer easy answers. The novel is funny, heartbreaking, and morally complex, asking difficult questions about quality of life, autonomy, and what it means to truly love someone. Me Before You became an international bestseller and a successful film, establishing Moyes as one of contemporary romance's most emotionally intelligent writers.

12. The Hating Game by Sally Thorne

The Hating Game cover

Sally Thorne's 2016 debut helped launch the modern enemies-to-lovers workplace romance subgenre. Joshua Templeman and Lucy Hutton are executive assistants who despise each other, or so they think. The banter is razor-sharp, the tension is electric, and Thorne's pacing is impeccable. The Hating Game proved that romantic comedies could work brilliantly on the page, not just on screen, and it remains the benchmark for the enemies-to-lovers trope.

13. Beach Read by Emily Henry

Beach Read cover

Emily Henry redefined contemporary romance with this 2020 novel about two writers with opposite styles who challenge each other to swap genres for the summer. January writes romance and Augustus writes literary fiction, and their creative bet forces both to confront personal pain they have been avoiding. Beach Read is smart, funny, and surprisingly deep. Henry's success helped elevate the entire romance genre's literary credibility and paved the way for romance novels to be taken seriously by mainstream readers.

14. People We Meet on Vacation by Emily Henry

People We Meet on Vacation cover

Emily Henry's second novel follows best friends Alex and Poppy, who take an annual vacation together until a falling out two years ago. Now Poppy has one trip to fix everything. The friends-to-lovers structure is executed with warmth, humor, and genuine emotional insight. The dual timeline between past vacations and the present reconciliation keeps the tension high while revealing how the friendship evolved into something more. Henry's voice is distinctive and addictive.

15. An Offer from a Gentleman by Julia Quinn

An Offer from a Gentleman cover

The Bridgerton series by Julia Quinn became a global sensation after Netflix adapted it in 2020, but the books have been beloved since the early 2000s. An Offer from a Gentleman, the third in the series, retells Cinderella through the story of Benedict Bridgerton and Sophie Beckett. Quinn's witty dialogue, Regency-era setting, and ensemble cast of lovable characters created a template that modern historical romance still follows. The entire eight-book series has sold over 10 million copies.

16. Vision in White by Nora Roberts

Vision in White cover

Nora Roberts is the most prolific and commercially successful romance author in history, with over 500 million copies sold across her career. Vision in White, the first book in her Bride Quartet series, follows wedding photographer Mackensie as she photographs everyone else's happy endings while struggling with her own romantic life. Roberts's ability to create compelling female friendships alongside satisfying love stories is what keeps readers coming back across decades and hundreds of titles.

17. The Duke and I by Julia Quinn

The Duke and I cover

The first Bridgerton novel follows Daphne Bridgerton and Simon Basset, the Duke of Hastings, in a fake courtship that becomes very real. The Netflix adaptation made this one of the most recognized romance novels in the world, but Quinn's original novel stands on its own merits. The banter is delightful, the Regency world-building is immersive, and the emotional stakes are genuine. This is the book that launched a franchise and brought historical romance to a massive new audience.

18. Twilight by Stephenie Meyer

Twilight cover

Stephenie Meyer's 2005 novel about teenager Bella Swan falling in love with vampire Edward Cullen became a publishing phenomenon that transcended genre boundaries. Twilight sold over 160 million copies worldwide and dominated pop culture for years. While often categorized as paranormal or young adult, the book's core is an intense, all-consuming romance that resonated with millions of readers. Love it or critique it, Twilight's influence on modern romance and publishing is undeniable.

19. Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte

Wuthering Heights cover

Emily Bronte's only novel, published in 1847, is romance at its most wild, dark, and destructive. Heathcliff and Catherine's love is obsessive, cruel, and utterly consuming. Wuthering Heights is not a comfortable love story. It is a story about how love can destroy as thoroughly as it can redeem. The novel shocked Victorian readers and continues to challenge modern ones. Its influence on dark romance, gothic fiction, and literary storytelling is immeasurable.

20. The Flame and the Flower by Kathleen Woodiwiss

The Flame and the Flower cover

Published in 1972, The Flame and the Flower is widely credited with creating the modern historical romance genre. Kathleen Woodiwiss introduced the idea of a full-length, single-couple romance novel with explicit love scenes set against a historical backdrop. Before this book, romance novels were shorter and far more restrained. Woodiwiss changed everything, and every historical romance published since owes something to this groundbreaking novel.

21. Persuasion by Jane Austen

Persuasion cover

Austen's final completed novel, published posthumously in 1817, is her most mature and emotionally resonant love story. Anne Elliot was persuaded to reject Captain Wentworth eight years ago. Now he has returned, successful and resentful. Persuasion is about second chances, regret, and the quiet courage required to admit you were wrong. Many Austen scholars consider it her finest work, and Captain Wentworth's letter is arguably the most romantic passage in English literature.

22. The Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion

The Rosie Project cover

Genetics professor Don Tillman designs a questionnaire to find the perfect wife. Then he meets Rosie, who is everything his questionnaire is designed to filter out. The Rosie Project is a romantic comedy with a protagonist who may be on the autism spectrum, written with genuine warmth and respect. Simsion turns the traditional rom-com formula inside out by giving us a hero who approaches love with scientific rigor, only to discover that the heart does not follow logic.

23. Flowers in the Attic by V.C. Andrews

Flowers in the Attic cover

V.C. Andrews's 1979 gothic romance pushed boundaries with its story of the Dollanganger children locked in an attic by their grandmother. The forbidden love element made this one of the most controversial and best-selling romance-adjacent novels of the late 20th century. It has sold over 40 million copies. Andrews created a template for dark, transgressive romance that still influences the genre today.

24. The Kiss Quotient by Helen Hoang

The Kiss Quotient cover

Helen Hoang's 2018 debut features Stella Lane, an econometrician with autism who hires escort Michael Phan to teach her about physical intimacy. What begins as a business arrangement becomes something far deeper. Hoang, who is herself autistic, writes Stella with authenticity and tenderness. The Kiss Quotient was a breakout hit that proved diverse voices and neurodiverse representation could drive mainstream romance success.

25. Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez

Love in the Time of Cholera placeholder

Gabriel Garcia Marquez's 1985 novel follows Florentino Ariza's 51-year pursuit of Fermina Daza. It is a meditation on love, aging, and obsession wrapped in Marquez's luminous magical realism. Love in the Time of Cholera operates at the intersection of literary fiction and romance, proving that a love story can be both commercially successful and artistically ambitious. The Nobel laureate's exploration of love that endures across decades remains unmatched.

Best Romance Books by Sub-Category

Best Romance Series

The Bridgerton series by Julia Quinn remains the gold standard for historical romance series, with eight interconnected novels following the alphabetically named Bridgerton siblings. For contemporary romance series, Emily Henry's body of work, while standalone novels, functions as a connected reading experience. The Outlander series by Diana Gabaldon offers the most ambitious scope, spanning centuries and continents across nine main novels.

Best Contemporary Romance

Emily Henry dominates modern contemporary romance with Beach Read, People We Meet on Vacation, and Happy Place. Sally Thorne's The Hating Game set the template for workplace romance. Jasmine Guillory's The Wedding Date launched a popular series of interconnected standalones. Abby Jimenez has emerged as a fan favorite with Part of Your World and its sequel.

Best Historical Romance

Beyond Austen and the Brontes, the historical romance canon includes Lisa Kleypas's Wallflowers series, Courtney Milan's Brothers Sinister series, and Tessa Dare's Spindle Cove series. Julia Quinn's Bridgertons brought Regency romance to the mainstream, while Beverly Jenkins made historical romance more inclusive with her novels featuring Black characters in American historical settings.

Best Romance Debuts

First novels that made an immediate impact include The Hating Game by Sally Thorne, The Kiss Quotient by Helen Hoang, Beach Read by Emily Henry, Red, White & Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston, and Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert. Each of these debuts signaled a fresh voice that went on to shape the direction of contemporary romance.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best-selling romance book of all time?

Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell holds the record for romance-adjacent fiction with over 30 million copies sold. Among books marketed specifically as romance, the Twilight series by Stephenie Meyer has sold over 160 million copies across all four novels. For classic literary romance, Pride and Prejudice continues to sell over 250,000 copies annually, more than two centuries after publication.

Are romance books worth reading?

Romance novels are the most commercially successful fiction genre for a reason. The best romance novels offer complex characters, emotional depth, and storytelling craft that rivals any other genre. Authors like Jane Austen, Emily Henry, and Colleen Hoover have proven that love stories can be both intellectually engaging and emotionally satisfying. The genre's stigma is fading as readers and critics recognize its literary value.

The romantasy subgenre continues to dominate, with Sarah J. Maas and Rebecca Yarros leading sales. Contemporary romance by Emily Henry and Abby Jimenez consistently tops bestseller charts. BookTok continues to drive discovery, with older titles like It Ends with Us experiencing sales surges years after publication. Dark romance and morally complex love stories are also trending strongly.

What is the difference between romance and romantasy?

Romance novels focus on a love story as the central plot, set in any time period or setting. Romantasy specifically blends romance with fantasy world-building, magic systems, and epic stakes. Think A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas or Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros. Romantasy has emerged as its own distinct subgenre with dedicated readership and bestseller potential. Explore our romantasy list →


Looking for more genres? Browse all genres → | Related: Best Fantasy Books → · Best Contemporary Fiction → · Best Romantasy Books →

Listen to Book Reviews and Summaries

Discover your next great romance read without extra screen time. speakeasy converts book reviews, author interviews, and literary articles into audio you can enjoy anywhere. Paste any URL and listen — 3 free articles per week, no account needed.

Share:

Related Posts