Finnish Text to Speech

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

Finnish is a Uralic language, unrelated to the Indo-European family, and its phonetics work in the synthesizer's favor: spelling is almost perfectly phonemic, so each letter maps to one sound and grapheme-to-phoneme conversion is unusually clean. The real challenges are vowel harmony — front vowels (ä, ö, y) and back vowels (a, o, u) cannot mix within a native word, which shapes how suffixes are pronounced — and phonemic length, where doubled letters like "tuli" versus "tuuli" or "tili" versus "tilli" change meaning entirely and must be held for the right duration. Finnish is highly agglutinative, stacking case and possessive suffixes into very long words, and stress falls predictably on the first syllable. A good Finnish voice therefore spends less effort on pronunciation guessing and more on getting consonant and vowel length exactly right.

Open the Finnish voice editor

Sample — Suomi

“Tekstistä puheeksi -tekniikka antaa tietokoneen lukea suomenkielisiä tekstejä luonnollisella ja selkeällä äänellä.”

Native name
Suomi
Speakers
~5.4 million native speakers
Language family
Finnic (Uralic — not Indo-European)
Script
Latin (with ä, ö)
Spoken in
Finland, parts of Sweden and Karelia

2 Finnish AI Voices

Harri (Finnish)

Piper
Ατελώς Male
Χρήση

CSS10 (Finnish)

VITS
Ατελώς Neutral
Χρήση

What people use Finnish text to speech for

Narration for Finnish e-learning and MOOC platforms
Accessibility reading meeting Finnish public-sector standards
Automated announcements for Finnish transit and services
Language-learning pronunciation models for Finnish students
Voiceovers for Finnish corporate and marketing video

Finnish Text to Speech — FAQ

Finnish spelling is nearly phonemic — each letter maps to a single sound — so the engine rarely has to guess pronunciation, making Finnish one of the most reliable languages to synthesize.

Yes. Finnish uses phonemic length, where doubled letters signal a held sound and change meaning (tuli vs. tuuli); the voice lengthens those vowels and consonants for the correct duration.

Finnish is agglutinative and stacks suffixes into long words. The model keeps first-syllable stress and reads the whole word as one unit instead of pausing between its parts.

Yes. Native Finnish words keep front vowels (ä, ö, y) and back vowels (a, o, u) separate, and the voice pronounces ä and ö as their own distinct sounds rather than as variants of a and o.

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