Luxembourgish Text to Speech

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

Luxembourgish text-to-speech voices a small but officially recognized West Germanic language that sits at the heart of a famously trilingual country where Lëtzebuergesch, French, and German share daily life. Synthesizing it well is challenging precisely because of that contact: written Luxembourgish borrows heavily from French and German vocabulary, so a voice must switch pronunciation registers within a single sentence without slipping into a German or French accent. The language’s standardized spelling is relatively young and still evolving, and features like the "Eifeler Regel" final-n deletion give it a rhythm distinct from its Germanic neighbors. National broadcasters, government accessibility services, and apps serving Luxembourg’s residents and cross-border commuters drive the demand for an authentic Lëtzebuergesch voice rather than a German substitute.

Open the Luxembourgish voice editor

Sample — Lëtzebuergesch

“D’Sproochtechnologie hëlleft eis, lëtzebuergeschen Text an eng natierlech Stëmm ze verwandelen fir all Dag.”

Native name
Lëtzebuergesch
Speakers
Around 400,000 speakers
Language family
West Germanic (Moselle Franconian), Indo-European
Script
Latin
Spoken in
Luxembourg, with adjacent communities in Belgium, France (Lorraine), and western Germany

1 Luxembourgish AI Voices

Marylux (Luxembourgish)

Piper
Бушлай Female
куллану

What people use Luxembourgish text to speech for

Public-service and government announcements in Luxembourg
Accessibility narration for residents and cross-border commuters
National broadcast and media voiceovers
Language-learning apps teaching Lëtzebuergesch
Local business IVR and navigation prompts

Luxembourgish Text to Speech — FAQ

Although Luxembourgish grew out of a Moselle Franconian dialect, it is a distinct official language with its own spelling, vocabulary, and pronunciation. A German voice would mispronounce its French loanwords and miss its characteristic rhythm.

Yes. Everyday Luxembourgish freely mixes words of French and German origin, and the voice is built to read these blended sentences with the appropriate native pronunciation rather than a foreign accent.

It has an official orthography, though it is comparatively young and still developing. The voice follows the current standardized spelling for consistent, recognizable output.

Yes. On a paid plan you may use the audio in commercial projects, including ads, apps, broadcast, and public-information content.

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