NaturalReader charges $50/mo for 100 minutes and was built as a reading aid, not a voice production tool. If you need more output and more creative control, there's a better option.
More Minutes, Half the Price
AI Voices
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NaturalReader has been around for years and it does one thing well: it reads text aloud. Drop in a PDF, a Word doc, or a web page, and NaturalReader converts it to speech in a clear, neutral tone. For people with dyslexia, visual impairments, or anyone who prefers listening to reading, it's a genuinely helpful accessibility tool.
The problem starts when you try to use it for content creation. NaturalReader's voices sound fine for reading articles and documents, but they're flat when it comes to creative work. There's no emotional control. You can't make a voice sound excited, sad, angry, or whispered. Every sentence comes out in roughly the same measured cadence, which is fine for consuming information but falls short for audiobooks, YouTube narration, podcast intros, or anything that needs personality.
Then there's the pricing. NaturalReader's Premium plan runs around $50/month for 100 minutes of audio generation. That works out to about $0.50 per minute. Their Plus plan costs roughly $30/month for even fewer minutes. Voice cloning isn't available on standard plans at all — you'd need to contact sales for enterprise pricing. And there's no voice changer feature on any tier.
The interface also shows its age in places. NaturalReader has a desktop app, a Chrome extension, and a web reader, but the experience is geared toward document consumption rather than audio production. If you're trying to batch-produce voiceovers for a YouTube channel or crank out chapters of an audiobook, the workflow feels more like a screen reader than a production studio.
HyperVoice approaches the problem from the opposite direction. It's a voice production platform built for creators. For $19/month you get 500 minutes of audio, which is five times what NaturalReader offers at less than half the price. Every plan includes voice cloning, voice changing, granular emotional control across all 176+ voices, and PDF-to-speech. No add-ons, no enterprise upsells.
Credit where it's due: NaturalReader's Chrome extension and document reader experience is polished. If your primary use case is listening to articles, emails, and documents while you multitask — essentially a personal reading assistant — NaturalReader's browser integration is convenient. But if you're producing audio, the cost-per-minute math and the lack of creative tools make it hard to justify.
A voice production platform, not a screen reader with a price tag.
500 minutes, voice cloning, emotional control. $19/month. No catches.
Try It Free500 Minutes for $19 vs. 100 Minutes for $50
NaturalReader Premium charges roughly $50/month for 100 minutes of audio generation. HyperVoice Personal gives you 500 minutes for $19/month. That's five times the output at less than half the cost. For anyone producing content regularly, the difference compounds fast.
Voice Cloning on Every Plan
NaturalReader doesn't offer voice cloning on any of its standard plans. Getting a custom voice requires contacting their sales team for enterprise pricing. HyperVoice lets you clone any voice in seconds — upload a short audio clip and it's done. Available on free, Personal, and every other plan.
Emotional Range That Sounds Human
NaturalReader voices read in a steady, neutral tone. That works for articles and reports, but audiobooks, character dialogue, and storytelling need more. HyperVoice gives you sliders for happiness, sadness, anger, fear, and whisper on every voice. Your narration actually sounds like someone performing, not reciting.
Voice Changer Built In
NaturalReader converts text to speech and that's it. There's no way to take an existing audio recording and transform the voice. HyperVoice includes a dedicated voice changer on every plan — upload a recording or speak into your mic, pick a target voice, and get a transformed version back instantly.
No Content Restrictions
NaturalReader is positioned as a reading accessibility tool and has content guidelines that restrict explicit material. If your project involves mature fiction, horror, erotic content, or anything outside their acceptable use policy, you'll run into blocks. HyperVoice has zero content restrictions.
PDF-to-Speech, But for Producing, Not Just Listening
NaturalReader can read PDFs aloud, and it's decent at it. But the output is designed for personal listening, not for exporting production-ready audio files. HyperVoice's PDF-to-speech converts entire documents to downloadable, broadcast-quality audio using any of your 176+ voices with emotional control applied.
Five times the output at less than half the price. Every feature included on every plan.
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500 minutes per month
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Common questions about switching from NaturalReader to HyperVoice.
NaturalReader Premium costs around $50/month for about 100 minutes of audio. Their Plus plan is cheaper but gives even fewer minutes. HyperVoice Personal gives you 500 minutes for $19/month — roughly 13 times cheaper per minute of audio generated.
Not on standard plans. NaturalReader's voice cloning is reserved for enterprise customers with custom pricing. HyperVoice includes instant voice cloning on every plan, even free. Upload a short audio clip and your clone is ready in seconds.
NaturalReader reads text clearly and evenly, which is great for consuming non-fiction. But for audiobooks, especially fiction, the lack of emotional control means every scene sounds the same — flat narration with no character differentiation. HyperVoice lets you adjust emotions per sentence, making it much better for narrative audio.
No. NaturalReader only converts text to speech. It cannot take an existing audio file and change the voice. HyperVoice includes a voice changer on every plan — upload audio or record, pick any target voice, and get transformed output.
NaturalReader is designed as an accessibility and reading tool, so explicit or adult content falls outside their acceptable use. HyperVoice has no content restrictions — generate whatever your project requires without limitations.
If your main use case is listening to articles, emails, and web pages while multitasking — basically a personal reading assistant — NaturalReader's Chrome extension and document reader experience is convenient and polished. For producing audio content, voiceovers, or any creative work, HyperVoice is the better tool by a wide margin.
Try our free tools or explore specific use cases.