How to Simplify Complex Text: A Practical Guide with Before & After Examples

July 9, 2026 · by Joaquimma Anna

1. Introduction

You’ve just written something. You read it back and think: “This is good, but it feels heavy. Would my audience understand this?”

You run it through a readability checker and get: Flesch-Kincaid Grade 12.4 (college level).

Your target audience is general adults. Grade 12 is too high.

So now what?

You could rewrite everything from scratch. But that’s slow and inefficient.

Or you could use targeted simplification strategies — specific techniques that address the readability problem without sacrificing meaning or quality.

In this practical guide, we’ll walk through exactly how to simplify complex text:

  • Diagnose what’s making your text complex (using readability formulas)
  • Apply targeted strategies to reduce complexity
  • See real before-and-after examples with readability scores
  • Understand the trade-offs (simplification vs. precision)
  • Learn common pitfalls that make simplification harder
  • Master techniques that professional editors use every day

By the end, you’ll have a toolkit of 10+ specific techniques you can apply to any piece of writing. And you’ll know exactly which techniques to use based on what readability analysis reveals about your text.


2. Define the Core Concept: What Does “Simplify” Mean?

When we talk about simplifying text, we don’t mean:

  • Making it stupid
  • Removing important information
  • Dumbing it down
  • Losing nuance or accuracy

Simplifying means making text easier to understand without sacrificing the core message.

The Three Dimensions of Simplification

Vocabulary simplification: Replace difficult words with simpler alternatives

  • Example: “utilize” → “use”
  • Effect: Reduces syllable count, makes text more accessible

Sentence simplification: Break long, complex sentences into shorter, clearer ones

  • Example: “The data, which was collected over a period of six months and analyzed using statistical methods, reveals a significant trend.” → “We collected data over six months. Statistical analysis reveals a significant trend.”
  • Effect: Reduces cognitive load, improves comprehension

Structural simplification: Reorganize information logically, use lists, add headings, break paragraphs

  • Example: Dense paragraph → Bullet points + headings
  • Effect: Improves scannability and understanding

All three matter. All three can be applied independently or together.


3. The History: The Plain Language Movement

The Problem (1970s–1980s)

In the 1970s, researchers and advocates noticed a crisis: Important documents were incomprehensible.

  • Legal documents required lawyers to decipher
  • Government forms were filled out incorrectly because people didn’t understand them
  • Medical documents left patients confused about their own health
  • Contracts had hidden clauses people couldn’t understand

People weren’t stupid. Documents were just poorly written.

The Solution: Plain Language

Plain language advocates argued for a radical idea: Write for your actual audience, not for lawyers, doctors, or officials.

Key figures in the movement:

  • Rudolf Flesch (1949): Argued that writing should be for readers, not writers
  • Ernest Hemingway: Modeled simple, clear prose that was still profound
  • George Orwell (1946): “Politics and the English Language” — essay on clear vs. obfuscated writing
  • Janice Redish & Joseph Kimble (1980s–present): Pioneered practical plain language techniques

Regulatory Adoption

Plain language became law:

  • FDA (1970s): Required patient package inserts to be readable
  • U.S. Government: Plain Language Act of 1998 required federal documents to be clear
  • SEC: Required mutual fund prospectuses to be understandable
  • Healthcare: Patient education materials must meet readability standards

Today, plain language is the standard across government, healthcare, and many industries.

The Key Insight

The plain language movement discovered something revolutionary: Simplifying writing doesn’t take away from it — it improves it.

Clear writing is:

  • Easier to read ✓
  • Easier to remember ✓
  • More persuasive ✓
  • More professional ✓
  • More credible ✓

Complexity doesn’t equal intelligence. Clarity does.


4. Diagnose Your Text: What’s Actually Making It Complex?

Before simplifying, diagnose the problem.

Running a readability checker is step one. But which formula should you trust?

Using Readability Formulas to Diagnose

Step 1: Check multiple formulas

Run your text through Flesch-Kincaid, Gunning Fog, and SMOG:

Formula Your Score
Flesch-Kincaid 12.4
Gunning Fog 14.1
SMOG 9.8

Step 2: Look at the gaps

  • Gunning Fog (14.1) is much higher than Flesch-Kincaid (12.4) and SMOG (9.8)
  • Diagnosis: Jargon and complex vocabulary are the main problem, not sentence structure
  • Action: Prioritize vocabulary simplification

Alternative pattern:

Formula Your Score
Flesch-Kincaid 13.2
Gunning Fog 10.1
SMOG 10.3
  • Flesch-Kincaid (13.2) is much higher than Gunning Fog (10.1) and SMOG (10.3)
  • Diagnosis: Long sentences are the main problem, not vocabulary complexity
  • Action: Prioritize sentence simplification

Best case (convergence):

Formula Your Score
Flesch-Kincaid 8.1
Gunning Fog 8.3
SMOG 8.0
  • All formulas cluster in the 8–8.3 range
  • Diagnosis: Text is consistently accessible. No major problem.
  • Action: Keep writing as is, or fine-tune only if targeting lower grades.

The Diagnostic Question

Ask yourself: “What would my target reader struggle with?”

  • Struggling with words? → Focus on vocabulary simplification
  • Struggling to follow the logic? → Focus on sentence and structural simplification
  • Struggling to stay engaged? → Focus on using lists, headings, white space

Your readability diagnosis + your sense of audience = the right strategy.


5. Real-World Examples: Before & After Simplification

Let’s see how specific strategies reduce readability scores.

Example 1: Vocabulary Simplification (Jargon Problem)

Original (Complex): “The implementation of artificial intelligence infrastructure necessitates comprehensive technological assessment and rigorous infrastructure planning. Organizations must prioritize algorithmic optimization to facilitate systematic efficiency improvements and enhance organizational resilience.”

Metrics:

  • Flesch-Kincaid: 14.8
  • Gunning Fog: 16.2
  • SMOG: 13.1
  • Word count: 41

Problems identified: Gunning Fog is much higher than others → jargon/vocabulary problem

Simplified: “Using artificial intelligence requires careful planning. Companies must assess their technology infrastructure and optimize their systems. This improves efficiency and builds resilience.”

Metrics:

  • Flesch-Kincaid: 7.2 (↓ 7.6 grades)
  • Gunning Fog: 8.1 (↓ 8.1 grades)
  • SMOG: 6.8 (↓ 6.3 grades)
  • Word count: 27 (↓ 34%)

Changes made:

  • “implementation… necessitates” → “requires”
  • “artificial intelligence infrastructure” → “artificial intelligence” (simpler phrasing)
  • “comprehensive technological assessment” → “careful planning”
  • “algorithmic optimization” → “optimize their systems”
  • “organizational resilience” → “resilience”

Result: Readability improves by 7–8 grade levels by replacing jargon with common words.


Example 2: Sentence Simplification (Sentence Length Problem)

Original (Complex): “The research team, which had spent over three years analyzing data from thousands of participants across multiple countries and using sophisticated statistical methodologies to identify patterns and trends, concluded that the findings were significant and warranted further investigation.”

Metrics:

  • Flesch-Kincaid: 14.2
  • Gunning Fog: 11.3
  • SMOG: 10.8
  • Sentence count: 1 (very long!)
  • Average words per sentence: 42

Problem identified: Flesch-Kincaid is much higher than Gunning Fog → long sentences are the issue

Simplified: “The research team spent over three years analyzing data. They studied thousands of participants across multiple countries. They used sophisticated statistical methods. The findings are significant and warrant further investigation.”

Metrics:

  • Flesch-Kincaid: 8.1 (↓ 6.1 grades)
  • Gunning Fog: 9.2 (↓ 2.1 grades)
  • SMOG: 8.9 (↓ 1.9 grades)
  • Sentence count: 4 (4 short sentences instead of 1 long one)
  • Average words per sentence: 10.5 (↓ from 42)

Changes made:

  • Broke one 42-word sentence into four sentences (10–12 words each)
  • Kept vocabulary roughly the same (methodologies → methods)
  • Same information, easier to digest

Result: Readability improves by 2–6 grade levels by breaking long sentences.


Example 3: Structural Simplification (Dense Information Problem)

Original (Complex): “Patient education regarding medication adherence should address multiple factors including the importance of consistency in dosing schedules, potential side effects and how to manage them, the significance of not skipping doses even when feeling better, interactions with other medications and foods, and the necessity of consulting healthcare providers before discontinuing use.”

Metrics:

  • Flesch-Kincaid: 12.8
  • Word count: 56
  • Sentence count: 1
  • Readability feel: Dense, overwhelming

Simplified (with structure): “Take your medication as prescribed. Here’s what you need to know:

Dosing: Take it at the same time each day. Don’t skip doses even if you feel better.

Side Effects: Common side effects include [list]. If they bother you, talk to your doctor.

Interactions: Some foods and drugs affect this medication. Tell your doctor about everything you take.

When to Stop: Don’t stop taking it without talking to your doctor first.”

Metrics:

  • Flesch-Kincaid: 6.2 (↓ 6.6 grades)
  • Word count: 71 (↑ 27%, but much easier because of structure)
  • Sentence count: 9 (short sentences)
  • Readability feel: Clear, organized, scannable

Changes made:

  • Broke dense paragraph into organized sections with headings
  • Created bulleted points
  • Used shorter sentences
  • Reduced complex vocabulary slightly (but more importantly, added white space)

Result: Readability improves dramatically because structure makes information digestible, even though word count increased.


6. Ten Practical Strategies for Simplifying Text

Strategy 1: Replace Multi-Syllable Words with Single-Syllable Alternatives

The Technique: Scan your text for words with 3+ syllables. Ask: “Is there a simpler word that means the same thing?”

Complex Simple Savings
utilize use −2 syllables
facilitate help, enable −2 syllables
commence start, begin −1 syllable
terminate end, stop −2 syllables
approximately about, roughly −1 syllable
subsequent next, later −1 syllable
endeavor try, attempt −1 syllable
ameliorate improve, fix −2 syllables
accomplish do, complete −2 syllables
consequently so, thus −3 syllables

Example:

  • Before: “We will endeavor to facilitate improved outcomes.”
  • After: “We will try to help improve results.”
  • Flesch-Kincaid reduction: ~2 grade levels

When to use: When jargon or formal vocabulary is driving complexity.

Trade-off: Sometimes the complex word is more precise. “Ameliorate” means “improve” but specifically “to make better.” If precision matters, keep the complex word but define it: “Ameliorate (improve) the situation.”


Strategy 2: Break Long Sentences into Shorter Ones

The Technique: If a sentence has 25+ words, consider breaking it into two.

Formula: One idea per sentence, usually.

Example:

  • Before (34 words, 1 sentence): “The data, which showed significant increases in patient satisfaction scores across all demographics and was collected during a six-month period, suggests that the intervention was effective.”
  • After (15 words, 2 sentences): “We collected data over six months. The results showed significant increases in patient satisfaction across all groups.”
  • Flesch-Kincaid reduction: ~3 grade levels

Target sentence length: 15–20 words for general audiences, 12–15 for very accessible content.

When to use: When Flesch-Kincaid scores higher than Gunning Fog (sentence structure is the issue).

Trade-off: Breaking sentences can make writing feel choppy if overdone. Balance short sentences with some medium-length ones for flow.


Strategy 3: Use Active Voice Instead of Passive Voice

The Technique: Passive voice often requires more words and is harder to parse.

Passive (harder): “The decision was made by the committee to postpone the meeting.” Active (easier): “The committee decided to postpone the meeting.”

Example:

  • Before (11 words, passive): “It has been determined by the research team that further investigation is warranted.”
  • After (8 words, active): “The research team determined that further investigation is warranted.”
  • Flesch-Kincaid reduction: ~1 grade level

When to use: Whenever possible (almost always in plain language).

Exception: Passive voice is appropriate when:

  • The actor is unknown: “The building was damaged in the storm.”
  • The action matters more than the actor: “Mistakes were made.”
  • You’re being intentionally vague (rarely)

Strategy 4: Eliminate Redundancy

The Technique: Look for words or phrases that repeat the same idea.

Redundant Simplified
final conclusion conclusion
completely finish finish
absolutely essential essential
return back return
more importantly importantly
basic fundamentals fundamentals
close together close
future outlook outlook

Example:

  • Before (13 words): “In conclusion, I would like to reiterate my final thoughts on the subject matter at hand.”
  • After (6 words): “In conclusion, here are my final thoughts.”
  • Flesch-Kincaid reduction: ~2 grade levels

When to use: Always. Redundancy adds nothing except syllables.


Strategy 5: Use Lists and Bullets Instead of Dense Prose

The Technique: When presenting 3+ items or steps, use a list instead of a paragraph.

Dense paragraph: “The medication has several important side effects you should know about, including headaches, which are usually mild, nausea, which typically goes away after a few days, and dizziness, which can be severe in some cases, so consult your doctor if any of these occur.”

List format: “Common side effects include:

  • Headaches (usually mild)
  • Nausea (typically goes away after a few days)
  • Dizziness (can be severe; consult your doctor)

Effect on readability:

  • Before: Flesch-Kincaid 10.2 (dense paragraph)
  • After: Flesch-Kincaid 7.1 (list format)
  • Reduction: ~3 grade levels from structure alone, even with same words

When to use: When you have 3+ items, steps, conditions, examples, or options.


Strategy 6: Add Subheadings to Break Up Text

The Technique: Long, dense sections become scannable with clear subheadings.

Effect on readability: Subheadings don’t change readability formula scores, but they dramatically improve comprehension and skimmability.

Example structure:

What is Type 2 Diabetes?

Symptoms
Common signs include...

Risk Factors
You're at higher risk if...

Treatment
Options include diet, exercise, and medication...

When to See a Doctor
Contact your doctor if...

When to use: Articles longer than 500 words; any educational or healthcare content; any content with multiple topics.


Strategy 7: Define Technical Terms Inline

The Technique: Instead of leaving readers confused, define technical terms right where they appear.

Example:

  • Before: “Mitochondrial dysfunction leads to reduced ATP production.”
  • After: “Mitochondrial dysfunction (damage to the powerhouse of the cell) leads to reduced ATP production (energy loss).”
  • Effect: Comprehension improves even though Flesch-Kincaid score stays similar

Alternative: Define in parentheses or in a glossary. Either works.

When to use: Whenever using specialized terminology your audience might not know.


Strategy 8: Replace Nominalizations with Verbs

The Technique: Nouns made from verbs (“nominalizations”) often make sentences harder.

Nominalization (noun) Verb Form Reduction
make a decision decide −2 words
provide assistance assist −1 word
conduct an investigation investigate −1 word
reach a conclusion conclude −1 word
perform an examination examine −1 word
demonstrate evidence show −2 words

Example:

  • Before (10 words, nominalization): “The provision of services was the responsibility of the department.”
  • After (8 words, verb): “The department provided services.”
  • Flesch-Kincaid reduction: ~2 grade levels

When to use: Formal, passive writing that needs to become more active.


Strategy 9: Use Concrete Examples

The Technique: Abstract concepts are hard to understand. Concrete examples make them clear.

Example:

  • Before (abstract): “Sustained behavioral modification requires consistent motivation and environmental support mechanisms.”
  • After (concrete): “To change your habits, you need consistent motivation and environmental support. Example: If you want to exercise more, join a gym and find an exercise buddy.”
  • Effect on readability: Concrete examples don’t reduce Flesch-Kincaid, but they dramatically improve comprehension

When to use: When explaining abstract concepts, instructions, or complex ideas.


Strategy 10: Use Familiar Words from Readers’ Experience

The Technique: Choose words that readers encounter in daily life over academic or technical alternatives.

Academic Familiar Difference
utilize use One is jargon; one is common
approximately about, roughly Academic vs. conversational
commence start, begin Formal vs. common
regarding about Technical vs. conversational

Example:

  • Before: “Regarding the medication, implementation of the dosing schedule requires consistent adherence.”
  • After: “About the medication: Take it on schedule. Stick with it.”

When to use: Writing for general audiences, patients, non-specialists.

Trade-off: Sometimes technical terms are standard in a field. Keep them if your audience expects them.


7. Common Mistakes When Simplifying

Mistake 1: Over-Simplifying and Losing Meaning

Wrong: “The intervention resulted in statistically significant improvements” → “It got better”

Right: “The intervention resulted in significant improvements” → Simpler vocabulary, same meaning

Lesson: Simplify language, not substance. Don’t lose accuracy.


Mistake 2: Using Words You Wouldn’t Say Aloud

Wrong: “The researcher did ascertain findings of substantial significance.”

Right: “The researcher found important results.”

Test: Would you say this sentence to a friend? If not, it’s not plain language.


Mistake 3: Breaking Sentences Too Much, Creating Choppiness

Wrong: “The data is important. We collected it. It took six months. It involved many participants.”

Right: “We collected important data over six months from many participants.”

Lesson: Use short sentences, but not all the time. Vary sentence length for readability and flow.


Mistake 4: Assuming Your Audience Knows Jargon

Wrong (for general audience): “The API integrates with existing CMS infrastructure.”

Right: “The tool works with the system you’re already using to manage your website.”

Lesson: Define or avoid jargon when writing for non-specialists.


Mistake 5: Over-Explaining and Making Text Longer

Wrong: “To sleep, which means to rest your body and mind for several hours, you should lie down on a bed, which is a piece of furniture designed for sleeping.”

Right: “To sleep, lie down on a bed.”

Lesson: Simplify doesn’t mean add more words. Often it means remove them.


8. Common Questions (FAQ)

Q: How much should I simplify before it feels dumbed down?

A: If your 8th-grade reader feels respected and not patronized, you’ve got it right. Aim for “clear,” not “childish.” There’s a big difference between simple and simple-minded.


Q: What if I’m writing for experts? Can I keep complex language?

A: Yes. Your audience determines your target readability. Writing for PhDs? Grade 14–16 is appropriate. Writing for general public? Grade 6–8 is better. Match your audience, not a universal standard.


Q: My text is about a complex topic. How simple can I really make it?

A: Simpler than you think. You can explain quantum mechanics in simple language; it just takes more words and more examples. Complexity should come from the topic, not the writing.


Q: Should I always aim for Flesch-Kincaid Grade 6–8?

A: Not always. Grade 6–8 is ideal for general public content. For professionals, Grade 9–12 is fine. For specialists, Grade 12+ is expected. Know your audience.


Q: Can I use readability formulas to measure if I’ve simplified enough?

A: Yes. Run your text through a readability checker before and after. If Flesch-Kincaid drops 2–3 grades, you’ve made a meaningful improvement. If it drops 0–1 grade, you need more aggressive simplification.


9. Further Resources & Tools

Related Articles on This Site

External Resources

  • Orwell, G. (1946): “Politics and the English Language” — Classic essay on clear writing
  • Flesch, R. (1974): “The Art of Readable Writing” — Influential book on readability
  • Redish, J. (2000): “What Web Users Do” — Research on how people read online
  • Plain Language Association — Resources and advocacy for clear communication
  • DigitalGov: Plain Language — U.S. government resources on clear writing

Try the Tool

Want to measure the before-and-after readability of your simplification efforts? Use our interactive readability checker to:

  • Paste your original complex text
  • See Flesch-Kincaid, Gunning Fog, SMOG, and other formulas
  • Identify what’s making it complex (vocabulary vs. sentence length)
  • Paste your simplified version
  • Compare the scores and see how much you’ve improved
  • Get specific guidance on which strategies to apply next

11. Conclusion: Simplification as a Skill

Simplifying complex text isn’t about dumbing things down — it’s about respecting your reader’s time and attention.

Clear writing is:

  • More readable
  • More persuasive
  • More professional
  • More credible

The ten strategies in this guide are tools. Master them:

  1. Replace multi-syllable words (vocabulary)
  2. Break long sentences (structure)
  3. Use active voice (clarity)
  4. Eliminate redundancy (efficiency)
  5. Use lists and bullets (scannability)
  6. Add subheadings (organization)
  7. Define technical terms (comprehension)
  8. Replace nominalizations (directness)
  9. Use concrete examples (clarity)
  10. Use familiar words (accessibility)

The process:

  1. Diagnose your text (run readability check, identify the problem)
  2. Choose strategies (vocabulary? sentence structure? organization?)
  3. Apply strategies (work through your text, make targeted changes)
  4. Measure improvement (run readability check again)
  5. Iterate (if still complex, apply more strategies)

The plain language movement proved decades ago: Simpler writing is better writing. It’s not a sign of weakness; it’s a sign of respect for your reader.

Next Steps

Writers: Pick one strategy and apply it to your next piece. See what works for you.

Editors: Use readability formulas to diagnose problems, then apply targeted strategies.

Teams: Establish a plain language standard for your organization. Make it expected, not exceptional.

Professionals: Help your clients communicate more clearly. It will be appreciated.

Try our tool on your writing. Simplify. Measure. Share. Your readers will thank you.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *