Thai Text to Speech

Turn Thai text into natural speech with AI voices. 5 voices. Free, no signup — download as MP3 or WAV.

Thai is a tonal language with five tones (mid, low, falling, high, rising) signaled by a combination of consonant class, vowel length and tone marks — so a Thai TTS engine cannot just read characters left to right; it must compute the tone of each syllable from those interacting rules. The script is written with no spaces between words, which makes word segmentation the single hardest preprocessing step, since incorrect boundaries change both pronunciation and meaning. Thai voices are in heavy demand for ride-hailing and delivery app prompts, banking IVR and tourism content across Southeast Asia.

Open the Thai voice editor

Sample — ภาษาไทย

“วันนี้อากาศดีมาก เราจะไปเดินเล่นที่ตลาดน้ำแล้วแวะกินก๋วยเตี๋ยวเรือร้านอร่อย.”

Native name
ภาษาไทย
Speakers
~60 million native speakers
Language family
Kra-Dai (Tai branch)
Script
Thai (Brahmic abugida)
Spoken in
Thailand, with speakers in neighboring Laos, Cambodia and Malaysia

5 Thai AI Voices

Bernard

KhanomTan TTS
ডিফল্ট Male
ব্যবহার

Default

KhanomTan TTS
ডিফল্ট Neutral
ব্যবহার

Kerstin

KhanomTan TTS
ডিফল্ট Female
ব্যবহার
ডিফল্ট Female
ব্যবহার

Thorsten

KhanomTan TTS
ডিফল্ট Male
ব্যবহার

What people use Thai text to speech for

Voice prompts for Thai ride-hailing and food-delivery apps
Banking and telecom IVR systems in Thailand
Tourism audio guides for visitors to Bangkok and the islands
Thai-language e-learning and language-app narration
Accessibility screen readers for Thai-script content

Thai Text to Speech — FAQ

It applies Thai tone rules, computing each syllable's tone from the consonant class, the vowel length and any tone marks — the same logic a native reader uses — rather than relying on the text to spell out pitch.

Yes. Word segmentation is built into preprocessing, so continuous Thai text (which has no inter-word spaces) is split into correct units before synthesis, avoiding mispronunciations from wrong boundaries.

It reproduces the full five-tone system — mid, low, falling, high and rising — which is critical because tone alone distinguishes otherwise identical Thai syllables.

Digits, currency in baht and Buddhist-era as well as Gregorian dates are normalized to natural spoken Thai, including the language's distinctive counting and classifier patterns.

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