French Text to Speech

Turn French text into natural speech with AI voices. 15 voices. Free, no signup — download as MP3 or WAV.

French text-to-speech has to handle liaison — the normally silent final consonant that resurfaces before a vowel, as in "les_amis" — which is contextual and one of the trickiest parts to get right. The accent choice matters a great deal: Metropolitan (Parisian) French and Canadian (Québécois) French differ noticeably in vowel quality, nasalization and rhythm. French also relies on four nasal vowels and largely fixed phrase-final stress, so a natural voice groups words into rhythmic phrases rather than stressing individual words the way English does.

Open the French voice editor

Sample — Français

“Bonjour, je vous souhaite une excellente journée et j'espère que tout se passera comme prévu aujourd'hui.”

Native name
Français
Speakers
about 310 million speakers worldwide
Language family
Gallo-Romance branch of Indo-European
Script
Latin (with accents and the ç cedilla)
Spoken in
France, Canada (Québec), Belgium, Switzerland, and much of West and Central Africa

15 French AI Voices

French Speaker 1

Bark
Πρότυπο Neutral
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French Speaker 2

Bark
Πρότυπο Neutral
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French Speaker

Bark Small
Πρότυπο Neutral
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French Female

CosyVoice 2
Πρότυπο Female
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French Female

CosyVoice3
Πρότυπο Female
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Siwis

Kokoro
Ατελώς Female
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French

MeloTTS
Ατελώς Female
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French

MOSS-TTS Nano
Πρότυπο Neutral
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French

OpenVoice
Θετική πριμοδότηση Neutral
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Siwis (French)

Piper
Ατελώς Female
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Fantine (French)

Pocket TTS
Ατελώς Female
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Jean (French)

Pocket TTS
Ατελώς Male
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Eric (French)

Qwen3 TTS
Πρότυπο Male
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Vivian (French)

Qwen3 TTS
Πρότυπο Female
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CSS10 (French)

VITS
Ατελώς Neutral
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What people use French text to speech for

Audiobook and e-learning narration for France and Africa
Québécois voiceover for Canadian media
Luxury-brand and fashion advertising voiceover
Public-transport and airport announcements
Accessibility narration and screen readers

French Text to Speech — FAQ

Yes. You can choose European (Parisian) French or Québécois, which differ in vowels, nasalization and intonation, to fit a French or Canadian audience.

Yes. Obligatory liaisons such as "les amis" or "nous avons" are linked naturally, and the engine avoids them where French grammar forbids it.

Absolutely. é, è, ê, à, ù, î and ç all change pronunciation, and the engine uses them to read words like "français" and "garçon" properly.

Yes. Final consonants that are normally silent (the "t" in "petit", the "s" in plurals) stay silent unless liaison or grammar requires them to be voiced.

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