Decision Support · Side-by-side
Compare pricing, strengths, and use cases so it is easier to pick the right fit.
Change tools
TTSReader
Best overallFor most everyday users, TTSReader is the better choice because it's cheaper, works directly in a browser with no technical setup, and handles documents and webpages. ReadSpeaker is built for businesses and developers who need to integrate high-quality text-to-speech into their own apps or websites, but it's overkill and overpriced for a regular person just wanting to listen to articles or PDFs.
ReadSpeaker
TTSReader
Scores at a glance
Choose ReadSpeaker if
Choose TTSReader if
Key differences
Facts side by side
| ReadSpeaker | TTSReader | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
No. ReadSpeaker has no mobile app and requires technical setup, so it's not practical for phone use. TTSReader can read PDFs in a mobile browser, but its dedicated mobile apps are outdated. For phone PDF listening, neither is ideal, but TTSReader is the easier option.
Yes, the free tier is permanent but limits you to a certain number of words per day and only offers standard (not premium) voices. Premium voices and unlimited usage require a $10.99/month subscription.
ReadSpeaker generally has higher-quality, more natural voices, especially for professional or commercial use. TTSReader's voices are decent for casual listening but can sound robotic on longer texts.
Yes. ReadSpeaker is designed for developers and businesses. You'll need to integrate an API or SDK into your own app or website. Non-technical users will find it very difficult to set up.
Yes. TTSReader lets you export any text or document as an MP3 file, which you can download and listen to offline. ReadSpeaker does not offer a simple download feature for end users.
TTSReader wins for everyday users with its free browser-based listening and simple MP3 export; ReadSpeaker is a developer tool for businesses, not for casual use.
If you're a regular person who just wants to listen to articles, PDFs, or documents without a headache, go with TTSReader — it's free to start, works in your browser, and exports MP3s. ReadSpeaker is only worth considering if you're building a product or website and need top-tier voice quality with a developer's help.
Detail pages: ReadSpeaker · TTSReader