I built speakeasy because I wanted a simple way to listen to articles. Not audiobooks. Not PDFs. Not Slack messages. Just articles, newsletters, and blog posts -- turned into audio I could listen to while walking the dog or doing dishes.
Speechify is the 800-pound gorilla in text-to-speech. Over 50 million users. Backed by serious venture capital. Available on every platform imaginable. When people search for a TTS app, Speechify is usually the first result.
So why would anyone choose a smaller, iOS-only app over the market leader? That is what this post honestly explores. I will give Speechify credit where it is due, be upfront about where speakeasy falls short, and let you decide which tool fits your life.
What Speechify Does Well
Let me start by acknowledging what Speechify has built. It is impressive.
Massive Platform Support
Speechify is everywhere. iOS, Android, Mac, Windows, Chrome extension, Safari extension, web app. If you use multiple operating systems throughout your day, Speechify meets you wherever you are. This is genuinely valuable and something speakeasy cannot match today.
Celebrity and Premium Voices
Speechify has invested heavily in voice quality and variety. They offer voices modeled after celebrities like Snoop Dogg and Gwyneth Paltrow. Whether you find that useful or gimmicky depends on your taste, but the underlying voice technology is solid. Their AI voice library is one of the largest in the consumer TTS space.
Deep Integrations
Speechify integrates with Google Docs, Outlook, Gmail, Canvas, and dozens of other tools. For students and professionals who need TTS across their entire workflow, this breadth of integration is a real advantage.
Audiobook Library
Speechify has expanded into audiobooks, offering a library of titles you can listen to within the app. If you want a single app for both TTS and audiobooks, Speechify tries to be that all-in-one solution.
OCR and Document Scanning
Point your camera at a physical page and Speechify reads it aloud. For accessibility use cases and students working with physical textbooks, this is genuinely useful technology.
Speechify has done more than any other company to bring text-to-speech into the mainstream. Their marketing and product reach have introduced millions of people to the concept of listening to text content.
Where Speechify Falls Short
Despite all those strengths, there are real pain points that drive people to search for alternatives. These are not invented complaints -- they come directly from App Store reviews, Reddit threads, and the conversations that led me to build speakeasy.
Pricing
Speechify Premium costs $139 per year. That is more than Netflix, Spotify, and many audiobook subscriptions. For what is essentially a text-to-speech utility, many users find this steep. The free tier is severely limited -- you get basic, robotic-sounding voices and restricted features that feel more like a demo than a usable product.
Feature Bloat
Speechify has grown into a Swiss Army knife of audio tools. TTS, audiobooks, AI summaries, voice cloning, document scanning, dubbing, transcription -- the list keeps growing. If you just want to listen to articles, navigating through features you do not need adds friction. The app has become complex in ways that slow down the core use case.
Aggressive Upsells
This is one of the most common complaints in Speechify reviews. The free version constantly pushes you toward Premium. Pop-ups, locked features behind the paywall, trial prompts -- it can feel like the app is designed to sell you a subscription rather than help you listen to content.
Privacy Concerns
Speechify requires account creation, collects usage data, and processes your content through their servers. For users who value privacy, this is a meaningful consideration. Every article you convert passes through their infrastructure.
What speakeasy Does Differently
speakeasy takes a fundamentally different approach. Instead of trying to be everything for everyone, it focuses on doing one thing well: turning articles into audio.
Purpose-Built for Articles
speakeasy is designed specifically for web articles, newsletters, Twitter threads, and blog posts. No audiobooks, no document scanning, no voice cloning. This focus means the entire experience is optimized for the most common TTS use case -- listening to the content you already read online.
Simpler Pricing
speakeasy costs $9.99 per month or $89.99 per year. That is roughly 35% less than Speechify on the annual plan. You also get 3 free articles per week with no account required, so you can evaluate the full experience before spending anything.
No Account Required
Open the app, paste a URL, listen. No email signup, no password, no profile creation. Your audio saves to iCloud and syncs across your Apple devices automatically. This is possible because speakeasy uses your device identity rather than forcing account creation.
RSS Feed Support
Subscribe to your favorite publications and blogs directly within speakeasy. New articles appear automatically, ready to convert to audio. This is a workflow that Speechify does not natively support in the same way.
Speed Control
Both apps offer speed adjustment, but speakeasy gives you a wider range: 0.5x to 4x playback speed. Whether you want a slow, careful listen or want to blaze through a newsletter at 3x, the control is there.
iCloud Sync
Your library syncs across iPhone and Mac via iCloud. No proprietary sync system, no servers storing your content. Your audio files live in your iCloud Drive, accessible even outside the app.
Feature-by-Feature Comparison
| Feature | speakeasy | Speechify |
|---|---|---|
| Price (annual) | $89.99/yr | $139/yr |
| Price (monthly) | $9.99/mo | $11.58/mo (annual only) |
| Free tier | 3 articles/week, full voices | Basic voices, limited features |
| Account required | No | Yes |
| Platforms | iOS, Mac (iCloud) | iOS, Android, Mac, Windows, Web, Chrome, Safari |
| Voice technology | InWorld neural voices | Speechify AI voices + celebrity voices |
| Speed range | 0.5x - 4x | 0.5x - 4.5x |
| RSS feeds | Yes | No (native) |
| Audiobooks | No | Yes |
| Document scanning | No | Yes (OCR) |
| PDF support | No | Yes |
| Browser extension | No | Yes (Chrome, Safari) |
| Google Docs integration | No | Yes |
| Voice cloning | No | Yes |
| iCloud sync | Yes | No (proprietary sync) |
| Offline listening | Yes (downloaded audio) | Yes (Premium) |
| Twitter/X threads | Yes (native support) | Limited |
Who Should Use Speechify
Be honest with yourself about your needs. Speechify is the better choice if:
- You use Android or Windows. speakeasy is iOS only. If you need TTS on non-Apple devices, Speechify is the obvious choice.
- You need cross-platform sync. If you switch between a Chromebook at school and an iPhone at home, Speechify's multi-platform support matters.
- You read PDFs and documents. speakeasy focuses on web articles. If you need to listen to academic papers, textbooks, or business documents, Speechify handles those formats.
- You want audiobooks in the same app. Speechify's audiobook library means one app for everything. If simplifying your app collection matters, that is a real benefit.
- You need OCR/scanning. Physical text to speech is a feature speakeasy does not offer.
- You need browser extensions. Speechify's Chrome and Safari extensions let you listen to any webpage without copying URLs. For heavy web readers, this is a convenience that matters.
Who Should Use speakeasy
speakeasy is built for a specific type of user, and it serves that user well:
- You primarily listen to articles and newsletters. If your TTS use case is converting Substack posts, Medium articles, blog posts, and Twitter threads into audio, speakeasy is built exactly for this.
- You value simplicity. No account creation, no feature maze, no upsell pop-ups. Paste a URL, tap play. That is the entire workflow.
- You are budget-conscious. At $89.99 per year versus $139, you save roughly $50 annually. The free tier with 3 full-quality articles per week is also genuinely usable, not a crippled demo.
- You are in the Apple ecosystem. If your devices are iPhone and Mac, iCloud sync gives you seamless library access without creating yet another account.
- You follow RSS feeds. Built-in RSS support means your reading list automatically populates with new content to listen to.
- You care about privacy. No account, no email, no tracking of what you read. Your content stays on your device and in your iCloud.
The Verdict
This is not a situation where one app is objectively better than the other. They are built for different people with different needs.
Speechify is the more powerful, more versatile tool. It handles more content types, runs on more platforms, and has features that speakeasy simply does not offer. If you need a comprehensive TTS solution across your entire digital life, Speechify justifies its higher price.
speakeasy is the more focused, more affordable tool. It does less, but what it does, it does with less friction and at a lower cost. If you are an iPhone user who wants to listen to articles and newsletters without dealing with feature bloat, aggressive upsells, or a $139 annual commitment, speakeasy is worth trying.
The free tier on both apps lets you evaluate before committing. My suggestion: try both. Use Speechify's trial and speakeasy's 3 free articles per week. See which workflow fits your life.
I built speakeasy because I believe most people searching for TTS want something simpler and cheaper than what exists. If that is you, give it a shot. If you need the full Swiss Army knife, Speechify is right there.
speakeasy offers 3 free articles per week with full voice quality -- no account or credit card required. Speechify offers a free tier with basic voices. Try both and see which fits your workflow.