Which Fae Romance Book Should You Read First?
The best place to start depends on what kind of fictional trouble you prefer.
For enemies-to-lovers romance and dangerous court politics, try Court of Blood and Bindings. Emelin is forced to pose as the lover of a fae assassin inside a court where humans are prey, which seems like an unnecessarily stressful way to meet someone. Effective, though.
For spying, political intrigue, and attraction to exactly the wrong person, start with A Kiss of Iron. Kat is sent to spy on a ruthless fae lord, and naturally the situation becomes much less professionally manageable from there.
For brutal trials and Norse-inspired romantasy, Of Blades and Wings brings a hidden ice-fae princess, Valkyrie training, a cursed fire-fae instructor, and a revenge problem that is unlikely to stay politely contained.
For queer fae romance, Goblin Heart follows an imprisoned goblin prince and the apprentice smith who may be able to help him reclaim his stolen heart. Bright Dead Things offers M/M fantasy romance, witches, a dangerous journey into the Otherworld, and second-chance tension.
For a fairy-tale retelling, choose Curse of the Thorn King for Beauty and the Beast inspiration, an assassination attempt gone wrong, an enchanted castle, and a tormented fae king. Nobody said affordable books had to include emotionally stable royalty.

What Can You Find in These Affordable Fae Romances?
Price may be the reason you opened this list, but the tropes are probably the reason you’re still here.
These 16 books cover a wide range of fae romance tropes, including fake engagements, cursed royalty, deadly competitions, court spying, fated mates, revenge, forced proximity, magical captivity, and second chances.
There are also plenty of risky bargains with powerful fae men, because fictional characters are nothing if not committed to questionable decisions.
Readers looking for dark romantasy have several strong options. Sold to the Fae centers on captivity, revenge, a powerful heroine, and three fae warriors who think they can control her. The Savage and the Swan brings together vengeance, captivity, a wolf king, and fairy-tale influence.
If court politics is your thing, try Heart of Silk and Shadows, Court of Blood and Bindings, or A Kiss of Iron. For competition stories, Starfallen, Of Blades and Wings, and To Marry a Fae all involve trials, games, training, or competitions where the romantic complications are not exactly helping matters.
For a broader introduction to fae courts, curses, and immortal love interests, read our guide to fae romantasy books. It’s the natural companion piece to this price-focused list.
Looking for a different corner of romantasy? Our dark fantasy romance recommendations go deeper into gothic romance, cursed contracts, dangerous attraction, and darker magical worlds.
Are These Fae Romance Books Really Under $9?
Yes, with one necessary warning from the mortal realm: eBook prices change.
These books were selected because their digital editions met the under-$9 price threshold when the list was curated. A publisher, retailer, temporary promotion, or discount can change that price later.
Fae Romance Books Under $9 FAQ
What are the best fae romance books under $9?
Some of the strongest options include Court of Blood and Bindings for enemies-to-lovers court intrigue, A Kiss of Iron for spying and dangerous attraction, Of Blades and Wings for fae academy trials, and Curse of the Thorn King for a steamy Beauty and the Beast retelling.
Are cheap fae romance books worth reading?
Yes. A lower eBook price has no direct relationship to story quality, popularity, heat level, or reader appeal. This list includes bestselling titles, books with thousands of reader ratings, indie romantasy, queer fantasy romance, fairy-tale retellings, and darker adult fae stories.
Which fae romance book is best for enemies-to-lovers fans?
Start with Court of Blood and Bindings, The Savage and the Swan, Queen of Sorrows, or A Court of Tangled Threads. Each pairs romantic conflict with fae danger, power struggles, magical stakes, or people who would be having a considerably easier week if they simply communicated.
Are any of these fae romances LGBTQIA+?
Yes. Goblin Heart by Fae Loxley features a goblin prince and an apprentice smith fighting to reclaim his magically controlled heart and freedom. Bright Dead Things by Hailey Turner is an M/M fantasy romance involving witches, dangerous fae courts, second chances, and forbidden love.
Fae Courts Without the Royal Price Tag
You do not need a royal treasury to read about cursed kings, ruthless fae courts, deadly trials, magical bargains, or romantically disastrous immortals.
Start with the trope that gets you every time, check the current eBook price, and proceed with exactly as much good judgment as your fictional favorites would. Which, admittedly, leaves plenty of room.
Want more romantasy without refreshing the same storefront 12 times? Join the Apropos Books newsletter and choose your favorite genres to get daily eBook deals sent your way.