Portuguese AI voices. Convert text to natural speech in Portuguese. Free, no sign-up.
Portuguese has roughly 260 million speakers globally — overwhelmingly dominated by Brazil (about 215 million) but with significant communities in Portugal, Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé, and East Timor. Brazilian Portuguese in particular is one of the fastest-growing TTS markets in the world thanks to Brazil's massive YouTube creator economy, the dominance of Portuguese-language podcasts (Spotify Brazil is one of the largest podcast markets globally), and the explosion of e-learning and edtech in LATAM. EasyVoice ships 3 Portuguese voices: pf_dora (female), pm_alex, and pm_santa (male). The voices target Brazilian Portuguese — the variety with the largest commercial market and the widest cultural reach — making them a strong fit for Brazil-targeted content but a slightly weaker fit for Portugal-targeted work where European Portuguese phonology differs noticeably. Common Portuguese use cases: Brazilian YouTube creators (one of the most active creator economies globally), Portuguese-language podcasts for Brazil and Portugal markets, Brazilian e-learning and edtech narration, IVR for Brazilian call centres, accessibility read-aloud for Brazilian government and B2C portals, and Portuguese-language audiobook drafts.
EasyVoice's 3 Portuguese voices target Brazilian Portuguese (português brasileiro) — specifically the neutralized broadcast register used by Globo, Brazilian national TV, and most Brazilian voice talent in São Paulo and Rio. The output uses the open and nasal vowel realizations characteristic of Brazilian Portuguese (the 'ão' in 'pão', the open 'é' in 'café'), the soft palatalized 'ti' and 'di' before 'i' (so 'noite' renders closer to 'noi-tchi'), and the rhythm and prosody Brazilian listeners expect. They do not target European Portuguese (português europeu / português de Portugal), which has distinctly different vowel reduction (especially of unstressed vowels), a more closed prosody, the 'sh' realization of word-final s, and significant grammatical differences (use of tu vs você, mesoclisis in formal registers, different past-tense conjugations). For Brazilian content the voices are a strong native fit; for Portugal-targeted content they will read as 'Brazilian' to listeners and may not feel local. Distinct European Portuguese voices and African Portuguese variants (Angolan, Mozambican) are on our roadmap.
Three popular Portuguese voices — click through for samples and details.
What teams typically build with Portuguese voices on EasyVoice.
3 Portuguese voices: 1 female (pf_dora) and 2 male (pm_alex, pm_santa), all targeting Brazilian Portuguese. They're Pro-tier — a $9.99/mo subscription unlocks all 3.
Only Brazilian Portuguese today. European Portuguese has distinctly different vowel reduction, prosody, and grammar that the current voices don't reproduce — they will sound 'Brazilian' to Portugal-based listeners. European Portuguese voices are on our roadmap.
Yes — Brazilian creators are among our fastest-growing user segments. Pro commercial use covers monetized YouTube, paid courses, client deliverables, IVR, e-learning platforms, and SaaS products with no additional licensing fees.
ElevenLabs Brazilian Portuguese is good with cloning support, but per-character billing makes daily content expensive — busy Brazilian YouTubers routinely hit $99/mo on the Pro tier. Google Cloud TTS Brazilian Portuguese is functional but synthetic-sounding and requires GCP setup. EasyVoice's 3 Brazilian voices ship at $9.99/mo flat unlimited.
Pro accounts handle effectively any length — long-form Portuguese narration is chunked and stitched server-side with no per-character cap. A 60-minute Brazilian podcast script (typically 9,000–12,000 characters) generates without overage charges.
Partially — Angolan and Mozambican audiences are accustomed to both Brazilian and European Portuguese in media and will find Brazilian voices intelligible, though not local. Distinct African Portuguese voices (with their own prosody and vocabulary) are on our roadmap.