Georgian Text to Speech

Turn Georgian text into natural speech with AI voices. 1 voices. Free, no signup — download as MP3 or WAV.

Georgian text-to-speech voices a language that stands almost entirely alone: a member of the small Kartvelian family unrelated to the Indo-European, Turkic, or Semitic languages that surround it. It is written in its own unique Mkhedruli script—an alphabet with no uppercase letters—so a synthesizer must read characters that share nothing with Latin, Cyrillic, or Arabic systems. The phonology is famously demanding, featuring ejective consonants and dense consonant clusters where six or more consonants can stack without an intervening vowel, which pushes a TTS engine to articulate sequences impossible in most languages. Authentic Georgian voices are valued by accessibility services, edtech startups in Tbilisi, cultural-heritage projects, and a diaspora eager for content in their distinctive mother tongue.

Open the Georgian voice editor

Sample — ქართული

“ტექსტის ხმად გარდაქმნის ტექნოლოგია ეხმარება მომხმარებლებს ქართული ტექსტის მოსმენაში.”

Native name
ქართული
Speakers
Around 3.7 million native speakers
Language family
Kartvelian (South Caucasian)
Script
Georgian (Mkhedruli)
Spoken in
Georgia, with diaspora communities in Russia, Turkey, Iran, and across Europe

1 Georgian AI Voices

Natia (Georgian)

Piper
ఖాళీ Female
ఉపయోగించు

What people use Georgian text to speech for

Accessibility narration for Georgian websites and documents
E-learning and language-preservation content
Audiobook and news voiceovers in Georgian
IVR and automated phone systems for businesses in Georgia
Cultural-heritage and tourism audio guides

Georgian Text to Speech — FAQ

Yes. The synthesizer reads native Georgian text written in the Mkhedruli alphabet directly—no transliteration into Latin letters is needed, and the script has no uppercase forms to worry about.

Yes. Georgian is known for stacking many consonants together without vowels between them, and the voice is built to articulate these dense clusters naturally rather than inserting artificial pauses.

No. Georgian belongs to the Kartvelian (South Caucasian) family and is unrelated to Russian, Turkish, or Armenian. Its sounds and grammar are distinct, which is why a dedicated Georgian voice is essential.

Yes. Audio created on a paid plan is licensed for commercial use, including apps, e-learning, advertising, and broadcast projects.

Related languages