Urdu Voice Translator
Speak English and hear the sentence in Urdu, read aloud in the standard register understood across Pakistan and India. This Urdu voice translator runs both ways: an Urdu speaker talks, you read or hear the English. When the room is loud, type instead.
Urdu's script hides its short vowels, so text alone underserves a learner or a visitor; the spoken output restores everything the writing leaves out. And because everyday Urdu and everyday Hindi are close relatives in speech, the audio is understood by a far wider circle than the script suggests.
Register matters, and the tool picks the safe one
Urdu grades politeness through its pronouns and verb forms, and translated output lands on the respectful register, the correct default with elders, officials, and strangers. That single fact does a lot of quiet work in family settings: the sentence you play for a grandparent sounds properly courteous without you managing anything.
From Karachi calls to Birmingham kitchens
The heaviest users are diaspora families: second-generation speakers in the UK, US, and Gulf who understand Urdu but answer in English, and relatives on the other end of the call in Karachi or Lahore. The tool bridges the middle of that conversation. Travelers use it for bazaars and taxis; students of the language use the reverse direction to check their ear against real speech.
Frequently asked questions
Yes. Free, no account, no usage cap for normal use.
Speak or type English, and the tool translates it and reads the Urdu result aloud. The reverse direction works the same way.
Yes. The microphone is optional; typed text follows the same path and plays the same audio.
Speech is converted to text for translation and handled like typed text: processed in real time, not stored.
For plain listening without translation, the Urdu text to speech page does exactly that.
Use the Urdu translation page for text work; this page is built for conversation-length exchanges.
Related tools: Urdu text to speech | English to Urdu translator | all voice translators.