Spanish and Italian Voices in the WithAudio Desktop App
WithAudio has always been strong for English listening, and we keep widening the languages you can use without leaving the app. We have previously enabled French. The desktop player now includes three Spanish voices and two Italian voices, so you can match narration to Spanish and Italian documents more naturally than forcing an English voice.
What shipped, and when
Spanish voices landed in desktop v0.1.68. Italian voices followed in v0.1.73. If you do not see the new options yet, update to the latest version, then reopen the voice picker.
How languages work in WithAudio
WithAudio does not flip a separate “app language” switch for speech. Each voice is built for a specific language, so you get Spanish or Italian audio by choosing a voice that fits your text. That keeps quality predictable: the engine and voice you pick are aligned with the material you are reading.
For filters, quick-access lists, engine downloads, and the rest of the workflow, see Using voices and languages in the documentation.
Hear them before you import a whole book
You can browse samples on the site without guessing from names alone:
- Spanish voices — samples for the Spanish lineup.
- Italian voices — samples for the Italian lineup.
In the app, use Manage Voices and Languages (from the player’s voice panel or Settings → Voices), filter or search for Spanish or Italian, and tick Add to Quick Access for the ones you want one tap away. Some engines need a one-time Engine Setup or extra download; you can still preview from the list before committing disk space.
Try it, then decide
WithAudio is a one-time payment text-to-speech reader for the desktop. We offer a free trial so you can run real documents through the app. Import PDFs or other documenets such as epubs or more, test voices, and workflows—before you pay. If you buy and it is not the right fit, we stand behind a seven-day money-back guarantee, no questions asked.
Update the app, add your favorite Spanish and Italian voices to quick access, and press play on the next paragraph you would rather hear than only read.