Hindi Text to Speech

Turn Hindi text into natural speech with AI voices. 4 voices. Free, no signup — download as MP3 or WAV.

Hindi is written in Devanagari, an abugida where each consonant carries an inherent "a" vowel unless modified — and the schwa-deletion problem (knowing when that inherent vowel is silent, as in "नमस्ते" read namaste not namasté) is the defining challenge for natural Hindi synthesis. The phonology also distinguishes aspirated from unaspirated stops (क vs ख, प vs फ) and retroflex from dental consonants, pairs that must stay crisp or words blur together. In practice much real-world text is Hinglish — Hindi grammar peppered with English words — so our voices are tuned for code-switched content used in IVR, OTT dubbing and ed-tech across India.

Open the Hindi voice editor

Sample — हिन्दी

“आज मौसम बहुत सुहावना है, चलिए हम पुरानी दिल्ली घूमने चलते हैं और छोले-भटूरे खाते हैं।”

Native name
हिन्दी
Speakers
~340 million native speakers
Language family
Indo-European (Indo-Aryan)
Script
Devanagari (Brahmic abugida)
Spoken in
Northern and central India, with diaspora in Nepal, Fiji, the US and the UK

4 Hindi AI Voices

Hindi Speaker 1

Bark
Norme Neutral
Utilisation

Hindi Speaker

Bark Small
Norme Neutral
Utilisation

Alpha

Kokoro
Gratuit Female
Utilisation

Omega

Kokoro
Gratuit Male
Utilisation

What people use Hindi text to speech for

Hindi dubbing and voiceover for OTT and YouTube content
IVR and customer-support prompts for Indian banks and telecoms
Ed-tech lesson narration for Indian online learning platforms
Hinglish announcements for ride-hailing and delivery apps
Accessibility screen reading of Devanagari web content

Hindi Text to Speech — FAQ

Yes. It applies Hindi schwa-deletion rules so that the inherent vowel in Devanagari consonants is dropped where a native speaker would drop it — for example reading "नमस्ते" as namaste, not na-ma-sa-te.

It separates aspirated from unaspirated stops (क/ख, त/थ) and retroflex from dental consonants (ट/त), distinctions that carry meaning in Hindi and that simpler engines often collapse.

Our voices are tuned for code-switched text, so English words embedded in Devanagari or Roman script are pronounced naturally within a Hindi sentence rather than being garbled.

Yes — vowel signs (matras), conjunct consonants (ligatures) and the nasalization marks anusvara and chandrabindu are all parsed, so complex stacked glyphs render with correct pronunciation.

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