KJV Reviews
King James
Version Bibles
Every KJV Bible I’ve personally used during my morning quiet time — reviewed honestly, thoroughly, and with the daily devotional reader in mind. No sponsorships. No fluff. Just the truth about how these Bibles hold up in real use.
Thomas Nelson KJV Giant Print Reference Bible
Thomas Nelson Publishers · King James Version ★★★★★The KJV I reach for every single morning. After more than a year of daily use, the giant print has saved my eyes, the binding has held firm, and the classic KJV text has deepened my memorization in ways no other translation matches for me. Here is everything you need to know.
Thomas Nelson KJV Giant Print Reference Bible
Thomas Nelson Publishers ★★★★★The KJV I use every morning. Giant print, durable bonded leather, and clean formatting that makes daily quiet time effortless on tired eyes.
KJV Wide Margin Journaling Bible
Crossway ★★★★★Generous side margins for notes, scripture art, and reflection. My go-to recommendation for women who want to journal alongside their KJV reading.
KJV Large Print Compact Reference Bible
Holman Bible Publishers ★★★★☆A surprisingly portable large-print option for women who need bigger text but travel frequently or carry a smaller bag. Great for the on-the-go quiet time.
The Daily Bible KJV — Chronological Reading Plan
Harvest House Publishers ★★★★★The entire Bible arranged chronologically with devotional commentary. A wonderful choice for the woman who wants to read through the KJV in a year with guidance.
How to Choose the Right KJV Bible
You want comfortable font size, durable binding, and minimal clutter on the page. Giant print reference Bibles are ideal — enough text to read comfortably, not so much study content that it becomes a homework assignment.
Wide-margin or journaling editions give you real estate to write, draw, and reflect alongside the text. Look for margins of at least 1.5 inches and paper that handles ink without bleed-through.
- Cross-references & concordance
- Commentary notes from a trusted theologian
- Maps and book introductions
- Strong’s numbering (for word study)
- Clean single-column format preferred
- Minimal footnotes to avoid distraction
- Font size 11pt or larger
- Compact enough to carry daily