Italian AI voices. Convert text to natural speech in Italian. Free, no sign-up.
Italian has roughly 65 million native speakers, primarily concentrated in Italy, San Marino, Vatican City, and parts of Switzerland (Ticino) and Slovenia, plus a globally significant Italian diaspora in the US, Argentina, Brazil, and Australia. While smaller than Spanish or French, the Italian market is disproportionately important for tourism, fashion, food and beverage, automotive, and luxury brand content — sectors that need high-quality Italian voiceover for marketing and e-commerce. EasyVoice ships 2 Italian voices: if_sara (female) and im_nicola (male). The model targets standard Italian — the Tuscan-derived literary and broadcast variety used by RAI national television, the bulk of professional Italian voice talent, and most national publishing. Common Italian use cases: Italian YouTube creators, Italian-language podcasts (a strong format in Italy thanks to Spotify and Apple Podcasts), e-learning courses for Italian schools and language-learners, museum and gallery audio guides (Italy is one of the world's top tourism markets), automotive and luxury brand voiceover, and IVR for Italian businesses. The flat $9.99/mo unlimited tier is materially cheaper than ElevenLabs for the kind of daily narration volume Italian creators run.
EasyVoice's Italian voices target standard Italian — sometimes called italiano standard, italiano neutro, or italiano della televisione — the Tuscan-derived prestige register codified in literature and broadcast media. The output uses the standard Italian seven-vowel system (with proper open/closed e and o distinctions where appropriate), the geminate (doubled) consonants that distinguish 'pala' from 'palla', and the rhythmic phrasing characteristic of broadcast Italian. We do not target the regional accents of Rome (Romanesco), Milan (Lombard influence), Naples (Neapolitan), Venice (Venetian), Sicily (Sicilian), or Sardinia (Sardo) — all of which differ substantially from standard Italian in vowels, syntax, and lexicon. For most national-reach content (TV, national YouTube, major brand work, e-learning) standard Italian is the correct choice. For deliberately regional content (a Naples-set drama, a Milanese local business ad), regional voices would be needed; those are on our expansion roadmap.
Three popular Italian voices — click through for samples and details.
What teams typically build with Italian voices on EasyVoice.
2 Italian voices: if_sara (female) and im_nicola (male), both in standard Italian (italiano standard). Both are Pro-tier — a $9.99/mo subscription unlocks them.
Not currently. Both voices are standard broadcast Italian — the Tuscan-derived register used by RAI and most national-reach Italian voice talent. Regional voices are on our roadmap but aren't available today.
Yes. Pro commercial use covers monetized YouTube channels, paid courses, client work, IVR, marketing voiceover, museum audio guides, and SaaS products. Italy's fashion, food, and tourism sectors are among our most active Italian Pro user segments.
ElevenLabs has more Italian voices including cloning, but per-character billing makes it expensive for daily creators. Google Cloud TTS Italian is competent but synthetic and requires GCP project setup. EasyVoice's 2 Italian voices ship natural output at $9.99/mo flat unlimited.
Pro accounts can handle effectively any length — long-form Italian narration is chunked and stitched server-side with no per-character cap. The free tier doesn't include Italian; a Pro subscription is required to access the language.
For draft narration, self-published audiobooks, and indie literary projects, yes — both voices have the prosody and clarity needed for long-form listening. Studio-grade commercial audiobook publishers typically still use a human narrator, but EasyVoice is a strong fit for creator-tier and indie production.