TG Productive Web Apps
Natural Voice Generator

Describe a voice. Turn your words into natural speech.

Write a simple voice direction as if you were chatting with a narrator, add your script, and create an expressive MP3.

10 supported languages No sign-up required 24h automatic file deletion MP3 player and download
Chat with the voice studioTell it who should speak and how the voice should feel.
01

Describe the voice

Use normal words—no special commands are needed.

Try a voice idea
A useful description can include:age and characterhigh or deep pitchpaceemotionaccent or speaking style
02

Write the speech

Enter exactly what you want the new voice to say.

Your files are temporary

Generated MP3 files are automatically removed within 24 hours.

Natural text to speech

Generate a natural voice by describing it in your own words

This natural voice generator lets you direct a voice in much the same way you would brief a narrator. Instead of choosing one fixed speaker from a short menu, you explain the kind of voice you want: warm or serious, youthful or mature, calm or energetic, soft or powerful. Add the text that should be spoken, select its language, and the tool creates a fresh performance shaped around your description. This makes it useful when a standard text-to-speech voice feels too generic for the story, character, presentation, or draft you have in mind.

What kinds of voices can you describe?

There is no catalog of named or ready-made speaker voices in this tool. The resulting voice is created from the description you enter. You can combine age, pitch, vocal texture, pace, emotion, personality, and delivery style in many ways. For example, you can request a bright child-like storyteller, a relaxed young presenter, a warm adult teacher, a deep documentary narrator, a mature radio host, a soft bedtime reader, an excited sports announcer, a thoughtful audiobook voice, a mysterious fictional character, or a crisp professional guide. These are prompt examples rather than included speakers or presets.

Age and characterChild-like, teenage, young adult, adult, mature, elderly Vocal toneWarm, bright, deep, soft, airy, crisp, husky, resonant DeliveryCalm, cheerful, energetic, serious, dramatic, gentle, conversational RolesStoryteller, teacher, narrator, presenter, announcer, guide, fictional character EmotionHappy, reassuring, curious, excited, thoughtful, surprised, concerned RhythmSlow and careful, relaxed, natural, quick, punchy, strongly emphasized

A detailed direction often produces a more intentional result than a single adjective. “A friendly voice” is understandable, but “a friendly young adult with a clear mid-range voice, relaxed pace, and lightly upbeat conversational delivery” gives a fuller picture. You can also mention whether the voice should sound close and intimate, polished and presentational, theatrical, restrained, curious, or confident.

Supported languages

The generator supports English, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, German, French, Russian, Portuguese, Spanish, and Italian. Choose the language that matches the text you enter. Punctuation still matters: commas create useful breathing space, full stops separate ideas, and question marks help shape a question. If you are creating a long passage, shorter sentences are usually easier to review and adjust than one unbroken paragraph.

How to use the voice prompt

  1. In the first box, describe who is speaking and how the voice should sound.
  2. Mention useful qualities such as age, pitch, pace, emotion, vocal texture, and speaking role.
  3. Write the exact speech in the second box and select its language.
  4. Press Generate. If the service is busy, your numbered waiting-list position will appear.
  5. When the audio is ready, listen in the built-in player and download the MP3 if it fits your needs.

The example buttons are useful when you do not know how to begin. Select one, then edit the description. You might make a storyteller older, slow down a presenter, make an announcer less dramatic, or ask for clearer pronunciation. Small changes can produce a noticeably different performance, so it is worth treating the description as a creative direction rather than a permanent preset.

Useful ideas for voice generation

A custom voice can help with draft narration, fictional dialogue, learning materials, language practice, presentation mockups, podcast planning, animation timing, game characters, short stories, accessibility experiments, product demonstrations, and social video concepts. Writers can hear whether dialogue feels natural. Editors can test the pace of a scene before arranging final recordings. Teachers can make a lesson more varied by giving different passages distinct speaking styles. Creators can compare a calm version with an energetic one before deciding what suits the material.

How to get a more natural result

Keep the voice description consistent. Asking for a whispering voice that is also loud and forceful creates conflicting directions. Choose a few qualities that work together, such as “soft, close, slow, and reassuring” or “bright, quick, confident, and playful.” Write speech that fits the requested delivery. A serious documentary voice may sound more convincing with measured sentences, while an excited character can benefit from shorter phrases and expressive punctuation. Names, abbreviations, and unusual terms may need to be written phonetically if their pronunciation is important.

Listen, refine, and download

Once generation finishes, the result appears in an audio player rather than downloading immediately. Listen from beginning to end and pay attention to clarity, timing, mood, and emphasis. If the voice is too fast, too deep, too theatrical, or not expressive enough, select Create another and adjust only the part of the description that needs changing. When the performance sounds right, download the MP3 for your project. Generated files remain temporary and are removed automatically within 24 hours, so keep a local copy of any result you want to use later.