About me

Why listen to what I have to say about becoming a proofreader?

Hi there! My name is Michael, and I’m the founder of London Proofreaders, an established UK proofreading company that has been running for over 10 years.

Over that time, London Proofreaders has worked with thousands of clients around the world, proofreading and editing more than 14,000 documents for students, academics, researchers, businesses and professionals.

Representing Londonproofreaders.co.uk at an academic conference in Oxford, UK. March 2026.

But my experience is not just theoretical.

Before starting the company, I worked part-time as a freelance proofreader while holding down a regular 9-to-5 job. I know what it feels like to start from scratch, build confidence, find clients and try to turn proofreading into a genuine source of income.

Later, after redundancy pushed me to build London Proofreaders properly, I moved to the other side of the table. I began hiring, testing and managing freelance proofreaders myself.

10+ years
running London Proofreaders
14,000+ documents
proofread and edited
6,700+ clients
in 77 countries
Dozens of proofreaders
reviewed, tested and hired
4.8 Trustpilot rating
from client reviews

Since then, I have reviewed, interviewed and hired dozens of proofreaders, particularly for academic proofreading work. That means I understand both sides of the industry:

What it takes to become a freelance proofreader.

And what proofreading companies actually look for when deciding who to hire.

That second point is important.

Most advice about becoming a proofreader focuses only on grammar, training courses or generic freelancing tips. But very little explains how the proofreading market really works, what clients expect, how companies assess proofreaders, and how to position yourself so you are taken seriously.

Over the years, I’ve received countless emails through the London Proofreaders website from people asking how to get started. The questions are usually very practical:

I created this ebook to answer those questions properly.

It is not a generic “work from home” guide, and it is not a grammar textbook. It is a practical, honest guide based on more than a decade of running a real UK proofreading company and seeing first-hand what separates successful applicants from those who never get hired.

If you want to understand how to become a proofreader in the UK — and how to give yourself the best chance of actually finding paid work — this ebook was written for you.

Get the how to become a proofreader ebook here.