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Wispr Flow

Wispr Flow is an AI voice-to-text dictation tool that turns speech into clear, polished writing across Mac, Windows, iPhone and Android.

Wispr Flow

What is Wispr Flow?

Wispr Flow is a voice-to-text AI that turns spoken language into clear, polished writing you can use across applications. The product’s purpose is to help people type by speaking, so they can write faster with less manual keyboard input.

Wispr Flow is designed for use on both phones and computers and supports dictation in everyday work scenarios. The site positions Flow as usable “in every app” (on your phone or computer) and as a way to convert natural speech into structured text for tasks like drafting, replying, and documenting.

Key Features

  • Seamless speech-to-text for everyday apps on phone and computer, so dictated text can be produced wherever you type.
  • “Polished writing” output, aiming to turn speech into clearer, formatted text rather than raw transcripts.
  • Natural dictation workflow: speak at the speed you think, with Flow handling the conversion to writing.
  • Device availability across Mac, Windows, iPhone, and Android, supporting mixed-device work.
  • Role-focused workflows (from the site’s sections) for common writing contexts such as customer support replies, content drafting, development notes, and legal transcription.

How to Use Wispr Flow

  1. Download Wispr Flow for your device (Mac, Windows, iPhone, or Android) and open the app.
  2. Start dictating your message or text in the application where you’re writing.
  3. Review the generated, polished text and edit as needed before sending, saving, or using it in your workflow.

Use Cases

  • Drafting professional messages: dictate a response and turn it into polished text for email, chat, or DMs.
  • Customer support ticket replies: speak naturally to draft responses while maintaining structured output for faster handling across tickets, chats, and DMs.
  • Content creation: dictate responses and drafts for comments or messages when you need to move quickly from idea to written output.
  • Software development writing: dictate commit messages or refactor notes and use Flow’s translation from natural language into code-adjacent writing (the site explicitly mentions Cursor and VS Code).
  • Legal note transcription: use smart dictation for contracts, case notes, and client records with formatting intended to reflect clauses (the site calls out legal precision and clause-aware formatting).

FAQ

  • What devices does Wispr Flow support? The site lists availability for Mac, Windows, iPhone, and Android.

  • Does Wispr Flow work only in specific apps? The page describes “seamless speech-to-text in every application on your phone or computer,” but does not list any specific app requirements or exclusions.

  • Can Wispr Flow help with accessibility needs related to typing? Yes. The site includes an accessibility section for people who feel slowed down by a keyboard, describing structured, polished text output from speech.

  • Is there a free download? Yes. The page includes “Download for free” and repeats it across multiple sections.

  • Does Wispr Flow support specialized writing (e.g., legal or customer support)? The site provides role-specific sections (creators, customer support, developers, lawyers, leaders) describing tailored dictation contexts, including legal formatting and customer support replies.

Alternatives

  • Operating system voice typing (built-in dictation): a general-purpose option for speech-to-text on your device, typically without the same “polished” writing framing.
  • Standalone transcription tools: useful when you want to capture speech as text, but workflows may be more focused on raw transcription than turning speech into formatted, polished writing.
  • Professional writing assistant tools: alternatives that emphasize drafting and editing (often with text-first workflows rather than hands-free dictation).
  • Accessibility-focused speech-to-text solutions: options tailored for keyboard alternatives, generally competing on ease of dictation and structured output rather than role-specific workflows.