Dutch Text to Speech

Turn Dutch text into natural speech with AI voices. 2 voices. Free, no signup — download as MP3 or WAV.

Dutch text-to-speech must master a set of guttural and diphthong sounds that have no close English equivalent: the hard "g" and "ch" fricatives, and the rolling diphthongs in "ui", "ij", and "eui". The same orthography is shared by two main standards — Netherlands Dutch and Belgian Flemish — which differ noticeably in rhythm and the realization of the "g", so a voice trained on one sounds foreign to the other. Dutch also forms long compound nouns and uses many spelling-rule vowel doublings (aa, ee, oo) that signal length, all of which the engine must parse for correct stress. The frequent assimilation and final-devoicing at word boundaries add a further layer the synthesizer has to model to avoid a clipped, list-like delivery.

Open the Dutch voice editor

Sample — Nederlands

“Met tekst-naar-spraak laat je de computer Nederlandse teksten voorlezen met een natuurlijke, heldere stem.”

Native name
Nederlands
Speakers
~25 million native speakers
Language family
West Germanic (Indo-European)
Script
Latin
Spoken in
Netherlands, Belgium (Flanders), Suriname, Caribbean

2 Dutch AI Voices

Dutch (MLS)

Piper
Ατελώς Neutral
Χρήση

CSS10 (Dutch)

VITS
Ατελώς Neutral
Χρήση

What people use Dutch text to speech for

Narration for Dutch and Flemish e-learning courses
Accessibility reading for Dutch government and banking sites
Voiceovers for Netherlands and Belgium marketing videos
IVR and chatbot voices for Benelux customer service
Audio articles for Dutch news and publishing outlets

Dutch Text to Speech — FAQ

The voices follow the Netherlands (Standard Dutch) pronunciation. Flemish listeners will understand it fully, but Belgian Dutch has a softer "g" and different rhythm that this standard does not reproduce.

Yes. These guttural fricatives are signature Dutch sounds with no English equivalent, and the voice renders them rather than substituting a softer or hard-g approximation.

The model maps the spelling combinations ij, ei, ui, and ou to their proper gliding diphthong sounds, which is essential because Dutch spelling encodes vowel length and quality through these letter pairs.

Yes. Dutch joins nouns into single long words; the engine splits them internally to place stress correctly and to keep the delivery from breaking mid-compound.

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