Why Speechify Costs $139/Year (and Whether It's Worth It)

Breaking down Speechify's $139/yr Premium pricing, what you actually get, what most people use, and more affordable alternatives.

2026-02-15·7 min read
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Text-to-speech pricing is all over the map. Apple gives you a decent TTS engine for free. Open-source browser extensions cost nothing. And then there is Speechify, asking $139 per year for Premium access.

That is more than a Netflix subscription. More than Spotify. More than many audiobook services. For an app that reads text aloud, $139 raises a reasonable question: where does the money go, and is it worth it?

I am the founder of speakeasy, a competing TTS app, so I have an obvious bias. I will be transparent about that throughout this piece. But I also think there is a genuinely useful conversation to be had about TTS pricing, what drives it, and how to think about value in this category.

What You Get with Speechify Premium

Let me lay out the full picture of what $139 per year actually buys.

AI Voices. The headline feature. Speechify's premium voices sound natural and are available in dozens of languages. This includes celebrity voice options and a large library of voice styles. The quality is legitimately good.

Unlimited listening. No character caps or article limits. Convert as much content as you want.

Cross-platform access. iOS, Android, Mac, Windows, web app, Chrome extension, Safari extension. Your account works everywhere.

Audiobook library. Access to audiobooks within the Speechify app. The catalog is growing but not as large as Audible's.

Advanced features. OCR scanning (camera to speech), AI summaries, speed control up to 4.5x, note-taking, bookmarking, and integrations with Google Docs, Outlook, Gmail, and Canvas.

Voice cloning. Create a synthetic version of your own voice or others (with permission). This is genuinely novel technology.

Priority support. Faster response times for Premium subscribers.

That is an extensive feature list. On paper, it is a comprehensive TTS toolkit.

What Most People Actually Use

Here is where the pricing conversation gets interesting. Based on App Store reviews, Reddit discussions, and the feedback that led me to build a competing product, most Speechify users rely on a small subset of those features:

  1. AI voices -- the primary reason people upgrade from free
  2. Article reading -- pasting URLs or using the browser extension
  3. Speed control -- listening faster than 1x

That is largely it for the majority of users. The audiobook library, voice cloning, OCR scanning, and many integrations go unused by a significant portion of subscribers. People pay $139 for three features.

This is not a criticism of Speechify specifically. It is a common pattern in SaaS: companies build an expansive feature set, price based on the full package, and most users only touch a fraction of it. The question is whether the fraction you use justifies the price.

The VC-Funded Pricing Model

Speechify has raised over $100 million in venture capital funding. That context matters for understanding the pricing.

VC-backed companies operate under specific growth expectations. They need to demonstrate increasing revenue to justify their valuations. This creates pressure to:

  • Price high to maximize revenue per user
  • Expand features to justify the high price and reach new markets
  • Invest in marketing to grow the user base aggressively
  • Upsell relentlessly to convert free users to paid

None of this is inherently wrong. It is the standard VC playbook, and it has helped Speechify reach 50 million users. But it means the price reflects the company's financial obligations, not just the cost of delivering the service.

Text-to-speech technology itself has become significantly cheaper in recent years. Cloud TTS APIs from Google, Amazon, and Microsoft cost fractions of a cent per character. Neural voice synthesis from providers like InWorld and ElevenLabs is affordable at scale. The expensive part of Speechify is not the technology -- it is the business model built around it.

Transparency note

I am the founder of speakeasy, a TTS app priced at $89.99/yr. I have a financial interest in people considering alternatives. Take my analysis of Speechify's pricing with that context in mind.

Alternatives at Every Price Point

If $139 feels like too much, here is what the market offers at different budgets.

Free Options

  • Apple Speak Screen -- built into every iPhone and Mac. Enable it in Accessibility settings. Voices are decent, and it works in any app. No article extraction though -- it reads whatever is on screen.
  • Read Aloud -- open-source Chrome extension. Free, with optional cloud voices if you bring your own API key.
  • speakeasy free tier -- 3 articles per week with full-quality InWorld neural voices. No account required.

Under $50/Year

  • Pocket Premium ($44.99/yr) -- primarily a read-it-later app with basic TTS included. Good if you already use Pocket for saving articles.

Under $100/Year

  • speakeasy ($89.99/yr or $9.99/mo) -- focused on articles and newsletters with neural voices, RSS support, and iCloud sync. iOS only.
  • NaturalReader Premium ($99.50/yr) -- multi-platform TTS with good voice quality and document support.

One-Time Purchase

  • Voice Dream Reader ($14.99 once) -- excellent for PDFs and documents on iOS. Premium voices cost extra.

Premium Tier

  • Speechify Premium ($139/yr) -- the full package with every feature mentioned above.
  • ElevenLabs (varies) -- the best voice quality available, with pricing based on character usage.

Our Honest Take

Whether Speechify is worth $139 depends entirely on how much of its feature set you actually use.

Speechify is worth it if:

  • You use TTS across multiple platforms daily (iPhone, Windows PC, Chrome browser)
  • You rely on document scanning and OCR regularly
  • You use the audiobook library as your primary audiobook source
  • You need integrations with Google Docs, Outlook, or educational platforms
  • Voice cloning is valuable to your workflow

Speechify is probably not worth it if:

  • You primarily convert web articles and newsletters to audio
  • You only use one or two platforms (especially if they are Apple devices)
  • You do not use audiobooks, OCR, or voice cloning
  • You find the free tier too restrictive but do not need the full feature set
  • The upsells and complexity of the app frustrate you

For the second group -- and based on the conversations I have had, it is the larger group -- there are options that deliver the core TTS experience at $50-90 less per year.

I built speakeasy for people in that second group. At $89.99 per year, you get neural-quality voices, unlimited articles, RSS feeds, and iCloud sync. No account, no upsells, no features you will never touch. It is less than Speechify because it does less -- intentionally.

But if you genuinely use Speechify's full toolkit daily, the $139 is defensible. No alternative matches its breadth. The question is not whether Speechify is overpriced in absolute terms -- it is whether you are paying for breadth you do not need.

Try before committing

Before paying for any annual TTS subscription, use the free tiers. Speechify's free version, speakeasy's 3 articles per week, and Apple's built-in Speak Screen are all available today with no credit card required. A week of real usage tells you more than any comparison article.

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