Turkish Text to Speech

Turn Turkish text into natural speech with AI voices. 3 voices. Free, no signup — download as MP3 or WAV.

Turkish is an agglutinative language: a single root can take a long chain of suffixes ("evlerinizden" = "from your houses"), so a TTS engine has to handle very long, rarely-seen word forms gracefully rather than relying on a dictionary of whole words. Vowel harmony governs which vowels appear in those suffixes, and the alphabet's special letters — the dotless ı versus dotted i, plus ç, ş, ğ, ö, ü — must be read precisely, with the soft ğ lengthening the preceding vowel rather than being voiced. Word stress usually falls on the final syllable, and Turkish voices are popular for navigation, news readout and e-commerce serving Turkey and its European diaspora.

Open the Turkish voice editor

Sample — Türkçe

“Bugün hava çok güzel, hadi Boğaz kenarında yürüyüş yapıp bir bardak Türk çayı içelim.”

Native name
Türkçe
Speakers
~80 million native speakers
Language family
Turkic (Oghuz branch)
Script
Latin script (since 1928) with diacritics
Spoken in
Turkey and Cyprus, with large communities in Germany, the Netherlands and Austria

3 Turkish AI Voices

Turkish Speaker 1

Bark
Bisanzwe Neutral
Gukoresha

Turkish Speaker

Bark Small
Bisanzwe Neutral
Gukoresha

DFKI (Turkish)

Piper
Kigenga Neutral
Gukoresha

What people use Turkish text to speech for

GPS navigation and traffic guidance for Turkish drivers
News and article readout for Turkish media apps
E-commerce and order-status prompts for Turkish online stores
IVR and call-center systems for banks in Turkey
Accessibility narration for the Turkish-speaking diaspora in Germany

Turkish Text to Speech — FAQ

It treats ı and i as the separate vowels they are in Turkish, with distinct pronunciations — confusing the two would mispronounce a large share of common words, so the engine keeps them apart.

Yes. Because Turkish builds words by stacking suffixes onto a root, our synthesis works at the morpheme and phoneme level, so long unfamiliar forms like "evlerinizden" are voiced correctly without a whole-word dictionary entry.

The yumuşak ge (ğ) is rendered as a lengthening of the preceding vowel rather than a hard consonant, matching standard Istanbul Turkish pronunciation.

Vowel harmony is inherent in correctly spelled input, which the engine reads faithfully, and its prosody model places stress on the final syllable by default, with the usual exceptions for place names and loanwords.

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