4 British English voices plus 50 more across 8 languages. Convert text to speech for free. No sign-up required.
The UK punches above its weight in the global TTS market. Ofcom's 2024 Media Nations report tracked podcast listening reaching roughly 21% of UK adults weekly, and the Ofcom-tracked podcast advertising market crossed £100 million in 2023 with continued double-digit growth into 2024. British audio production has a distinct identity — BBC-style documentary narration, character-driven podcasts like "The Rest is Politics," and a thriving audiobook industry centered on London-based publishers like Penguin Random House UK and Audible UK.
EasyVoice's four British English voices target this market specifically: Received Pronunciation (RP) for documentary and corporate narration, plus voices that sit closer to neutral Southern English for podcast and YouTube use. The market reality in the UK is that "British accent" is not one accent — RP, Estuary, Northern English, Scottish, Welsh, and various regional varieties all carry different connotations. EasyVoice's voices skew RP and neutral Southern; for content that needs a specific regional accent (e.g., a Yorkshire-set audiobook character or a Glasgow-based YouTuber), human narration or specialized voice-cloning tools remain the better choice.
The UK e-learning market is also significant. The British Educational Suppliers Association (BESA) tracks UK schools spending hundreds of millions of pounds annually on digital learning resources, and a meaningful slice of that demand flows to EdTech companies needing scalable narration in British English for KS1-KS5 content. Flat-rate TTS pricing matters here too — a curriculum publisher producing thousands of audio assets per term cannot reasonably budget per-character.
GBP pricing approximates $9.99 USD at FX rates near 0.80 GBP/USD (April 2026). Billed in GBP via Stripe.
The UK TTS market is served primarily by US-headquartered providers (ElevenLabs, PlayHT, Speechify) selling into UK customers, plus a few European players. WellSaid Labs has notable UK enterprise traction. Acapela Group, headquartered in Belgium with a strong European footprint, has been a long-running supplier for assistive tech and accessibility software in the UK. ReadSpeaker (Netherlands-based, with UK operations) is a common pick for university accessibility programs. EasyVoice differentiates on two axes: flat-rate pricing in GBP via Stripe (no surprise FX markup) and a generous free tier sized for individual UK creators rather than enterprise procurement teams.
The four British English voices on EasyVoice are predominantly RP / neutral Southern English — the accent used in BBC News, mainstream UK audiobooks, and most corporate narration. We don't currently offer specific regional accents (Scottish, Welsh, Northern English, etc.). For content that needs a specific regional voice, human narration or voice-cloning tools remain a better fit.
Pro is £7.99/month or £19.99/quarter (~£6.66/month). Pricing is set natively in GBP and billed through Stripe — no per-transaction FX markup. Free tier is 5,000 characters per day, resets daily, and is available to UK users with no card required.
Yes. EasyVoice outputs are licensed for commercial use, including monetised YouTube, BBC-style podcast production (where you own the IP), audiobooks for UK retailers, and client/agency work. The free tier carries the same commercial license — we don't paywall commercial rights.
Yes — UK EdTech is a strong fit. The British English voices are well-suited to KS1-KS5 narration, university lecture audio, and corporate L&D content. Many EdTech publishers run into per-character pricing walls at curriculum scale; EasyVoice's flat-rate Pro at £7.99/mo is built for exactly this use case.
WellSaid Labs offers excellent enterprise voice quality but starts around $44/mo and is built for procurement-led buying. Acapela is strong in assistive tech and has a broader European voice catalog including some regional UK accents. EasyVoice is the small-team / individual-creator choice — cheaper, no procurement cycle, faster to start.
Yes. Billing runs through Stripe, which is GDPR-compliant. EasyVoice stores the minimum data required to run the service (account email, usage counts, billing reference). We don't sell or share personal data; the privacy policy details specifics. UK customers retain all standard data subject rights.