Hindi AI voices plus 50+ more across 8 languages. Free text-to-speech for creators, students, and businesses in India.
India is one of the most consequential growth markets for TTS globally, driven by three converging forces: the largest YouTube creator economy in the world by user count, the OTT content explosion (JioCinema, Hotstar, Zee5, Sony LIV, MX Player), and a BPO / call-centre industry that has been quietly automating IVR and outbound calling with AI voice for several years. According to YouTube's own published figures and Statista's 2024 tracker, India has more YouTube users than any other country — north of 460 million monthly active users — and Hindi is the dominant content language by hours watched.
Hindi YouTube creators routinely run into the same volume-vs-cost wall that US creators do, but with tighter budgets. A daily news commentary channel publishing 15-20 minutes of narration per day generates roughly 600K-900K characters per month. On metered TTS, that easily exceeds ₹3,000-5,000/month before voice-quality upgrades. EasyVoice's Pro plan at ₹499/month is priced specifically for this segment — the equivalent of one or two ad-supported video CPMs covers the entire monthly TTS budget.
The OTT content boom adds another layer. Regional-language dubbing — Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Bengali, Marathi — is where most Indian content scales. EasyVoice currently ships one Hindi voice (we are honest about this — it's a starting point, not full regional coverage), so Indian customers using EasyVoice today are typically Hindi-content creators or English-language content producers serving Indian audiences. The IVR / call-centre BPO use case is also active: Indian fintech, insurance, and customer-service operations use TTS for voice prompts at high volume, and flat-rate pricing matters at IVR scale where billions of characters per year is normal.
Pricing set natively in INR. ₹499 ≈ $6 USD at FX rates near ₹83/USD (April 2026) — a deliberately approachable price for Indian buyers, not a direct USD conversion.
India has produced one of the most successful TTS startups globally — Murf AI was founded in Salem, Tamil Nadu and has scaled to a global customer base, with strong voice quality and a polished product. Murf is a real competitor and we'll say so directly. Where EasyVoice differs: pricing. Murf's Creator plan starts around $19-29/month with character caps; EasyVoice Pro is ₹499 (~$6) flat-rate unlimited. Other regional players include Resemble AI (Toronto-based but India-active), Listnr, and various smaller Hindi-focused TTS tools. Google Cloud TTS and Azure Neural TTS are also widely used in Indian enterprise and BPO settings — strong on quality, but priced per character at volumes that get expensive fast for high-throughput workloads.
EasyVoice ships one dedicated Hindi voice (Devanagari script) and 20 General American English voices. Indian English (the distinct accent used by educated urban Indians) and Hinglish (mixed Hindi-English code-switching) are not currently first-class — for English text, the General American voices are what most Indian creators use. Hinglish output is possible by writing the text phonetically in either script, but this is a workaround, not a polished solution. We're honest that fuller Indian-language coverage is on the roadmap, not shipping today.
Pro is ₹499/month or ₹1,299/quarter (~₹433/month). Pricing is set natively in INR — not a real-time FX conversion. Free tier is 5,000 characters per day, resets daily, available without a card.
Murf is the strongest India-founded TTS competitor and has a richer voice catalog with more Indian-language options. Where EasyVoice wins: price (₹499 flat-rate unlimited vs Murf's ~₹1,500-2,500/mo metered tiers), free tier generosity, and OpenAI-compatible API. Where Murf wins: voice quality on premium English voices, broader Indian language coverage today, and a more mature studio editor. Many users adopt EasyVoice for high-volume work and use Murf for client-facing premium output.
Yes. EasyVoice outputs are licensed for commercial use including monetised YouTube, OTT content production, audiobooks, client/agency work, and IVR / call-centre deployments. The free tier carries the same commercial license. Indian buyers paying via Stripe receive a GST-inclusive invoice where applicable.
Yes — IVR and outbound voice campaigns are a strong fit for the flat-rate Pro plan. The OpenAI-compatible API integrates with most modern call-centre platforms (Exotel, Knowlarity, Plivo, Twilio India). At BPO scale (millions of characters per month), EasyVoice's flat-rate model is dramatically cheaper than per-character APIs from Google Cloud / Azure. Note: TRAI rules on automated calling apply regardless of TTS provider — make sure your campaign complies.
Yes. Billing runs through Stripe in INR. Indian customers receive a tax-compliant invoice; GST is handled per Stripe's India tax setup. Refunds, payment retries, and dunning are all in INR. We don't surcharge for currency conversion.