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Australian Accent Text to Speech

Type your text and hear it read by one of 17 native Australian AI voices — from broadcast-clean reads to relaxed everyday Aussie, with instant preview and MP3 download.

17 Australian voices3 AI enginesFree tier, no signupMP3 download
AU

Listen to Our Australian AI Voices

Every card plays a real sample — audition the accent before you generate.

The fastest way to spot a fake Aussie voice is to listen for the vowels — a genuine Australian read bends "mate" and "today" in ways an American model doing an impression never quite lands. The voices below are native en-AU models across three engines, 17 in total: bright conversational reads for social content, steady narrators for training videos, and broadcast-clean voices for commercial work. Click any card to hear it and note the engine tag for its quality tier.

Tier logic is the same across the site: the free Basic tier covers drafts and personal projects with genuine Australian neural voices, Standard adds HD depth for long material, and Advanced and Pro carry the studio-grade reads. One text box serves all of them, so drafting free and finishing on Pro is the normal workflow.

All voicesFemaleMale15 voices
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How to Generate an Australian Voiceover in 3 Steps

Boarding pass to a finished MP3 — under a minute, no account.

STEP1TXT

Type or paste your text

Drop your script into the generator at the top. Up to 1,000 characters per request works without an account — around 150 words of finished speech.

STEP2VOX

Pick an Australian voice

The voice panel is pre-filtered to the accent. Switch engines to trade speed for realism and preview any voice with one click.

STEP3MP3

Generate and download

Click generate, listen in the built-in player, and download the MP3 — ready for YouTube, training modules, or your phone system.

Slang reads best when you write it the way it's said: g'day with the apostrophe, arvo and servo as-is. The models learned these from real Australian speech, so the everyday shortenings come out naturally — spelling them "properly" (good day, afternoon) actually loses the accent's character.

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Broad, General & Cultivated: The Australian Accent Spectrum

One country, three registers — here's which one your project wants.

Map of Australia with the accent spectrum: Broad in the outback, General in the cities, Cultivated in broadcasting

Linguists split Australian English into three registers rather than regions. Broad is the outback-postcard sound — the Steve Irwin register, big vowels and maximum character. General is what most Australians actually speak and what you hear from Chris Hemsworth in an interview: unmistakably Aussie, easy on international ears, the commercial default. Cultivated sits near British RP — the old-school broadcast register, now mostly heard in formal narration and period work.

Where our voices sit on the spectrum

Cultivated · formalBroadcast-clean narration, corporate and documentary readsStart with Olivia or James
General · mainstreamThe commercial default — ads, YouTube, e-learning, IVRStart with Natasha or Emma
Relaxed & characterCasual social reads with more Aussie colourStart with Matilda or Charlie

An honest note on Broad: like every major TTS library, our en-AU voices cluster around General with a formal edge toward Cultivated — a full Steve-Irwin Broad register isn't something any synthetic library does convincingly yet. If a project genuinely needs it, cloning a native speaker (with their permission) beats any impression.

The rising intonation (HRT)

Australian English's most recognisable melody isn't a vowel — it's the high rising terminal, the gentle lift at the end of statements that makes them sound almost like questions. Good en-AU models reproduce it naturally in conversational text; you can hear it in the samples above on sentences that end in a comma-less clause. If you want less of it for formal narration, end sentences firmly with periods and prefer the Cultivated-leaning voices.

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Australian vs British vs American English

Three accents, one alphabet — the differences a voice model must get right.

Australian English shares its non-rhotic r and its spelling with Britain, but the vowels went their own way: "today" famously drifts toward to-die, "no" rounds into a diphthong all of its own, and "night" opens wider than either parent accent. Against American English the gap is bigger still — melody, r-sounds, and vowel length all differ. A model trained on Australian speakers does all of this automatically; anything else is an impression.

Formats follow the flag: AUD $ prices, DD/MM dates, and -ise spellings all read the way an Australian listener expects. If your script is written for a UK audience instead, the British accent page covers the same workflow with en-GB voices.

The word today pronounced in Australian, British, and American English
WordAustralian 🇦🇺British 🇬🇧American 🇺🇸
today/təˈdæɪ/ — "to-die"/təˈdeɪ//təˈdeɪ/
mate/mæɪt/ — wide open/meɪt//meɪt/
no/nəʉ/ — rounded glide/nəʊ//noʊ/
night/nɑet/ — broad open/naɪt//naɪt/
dance/dæːns/ (varies)/dɑːns//dæns/
water/ˈwoːtə/ — non-rhotic/ˈwɔːtə//ˈwɑːt̬ɚ/
spellingcolour · organisecolour · organisecolor · organize
formatsAUD $ · DD/MM£ · DD/MM$ · MM/DD
Hear the three side by side

Samples play each voice's standard preview clip — generate the same sentence above with different voices to compare them on your exact script.

Slang, read properly

G'day, arvo, servo, brekkie, no worries — Australian slang is half the accent, and it's where imitation voices fall apart. Because these models learned from real Australian speech, the shortenings read naturally instead of phonetically: arvo comes out as afternoon-in-spirit, not "AR-voh". Paste a slang-heavy script into the generator and listen for yourself.

04

What Creators Make with Australian Voices

Seven jobs where the accent is the brief, not decoration.

Australia punches far above its population in content demand: a huge tourism industry, a sports culture that narrates itself, and a training-video economy driven by some of the world's strictest workplace-safety rules. In each case below, swapping the accent would change how the audience receives the content — the practical test for using this page.

Tourism & travel vlogs

Nothing sells a destination like a local voice. Narrate itineraries, park guides, and travel content with the accent visitors came to hear.

Sports content

Footy recaps, cricket explainers, race-day promos — an Aussie read carries the energy the subject expects, generated as fast as results come in.

Mining & site safety training

Australia's WHS training runs on video. Generate inductions and toolbox-talk narration in the accent the crew actually speaks, and re-render the module the day a procedure changes.

Australian business phone lines

IVR menus and after-hours messages that sound local to Australian customers — updated per prompt, no studio booking.

TikTok & meme content

The aussie-accent trend cycle never quite dies. Generate g'day-heavy reads for skits and voiceovers in seconds on the free tier.

IELTS & listening practice

Australian voices appear in IELTS listening sections. Paste any passage and practise with authentic pronunciation on demand.

YouTube & explainers

An Australian narrator makes a channel instantly distinctive in a feed of American reads — and revisions cost seconds, not sessions.

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Why AnySpeech for Australian Text to Speech

Most tools offer one or two Australian voices as an afterthought. Here the accent gets the full platform: 17 native voices across three quality tiers, auditionable before you commit, with the same free entry point as everything else on the site.

Credits work the site-wide way: Basic is free forever, Standard and Advanced cost one credit per character, Pro costs two. A 60-second read costs under a thousand credits on the studio tier, and drafting on the free tier costs nothing.

Genuinely free entry

Australian voices on the free tier — no account, 10 conversions a day, MP3 included.

Three engines, one accent

Audition the same script across tiers and pay only for the tier the project needs.

Clone a real Aussie voice

Need Broad character or a specific speaker? Clone your own voice — or a consenting native's — from a 30-second sample.

Clone a real Aussie voice
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Frequently Asked Questions

Explore More Accents & Languages

Every entry links to a dedicated text to speech page.

This page is part of a growing atlas: the British accent page covers the en-GB side of the comparison above, and every language below has its own generator with native voices. If your audience spans regions, bookmark the hub — one workflow covers every market on the map.