PODCASTS & STREAMS

Translate a Foreign Podcast in Real Time as You Listen

VoxisLive plays a natural-voice translation of any podcast in your language while it streams — no subtitles to read, no setup to fight.

Speech-to-speech, not subtitles

VoxisLive treats a foreign podcast the way a native simultaneous interpreter would: it listens to the speaker, stays a few seconds behind, and plays a continuous spoken translation in your target language while the episode runs. You keep your eyes free and simply listen, instead of racing to read captions.

Because the output is spoken audio, it fits the way podcasts are actually consumed — on a walk, while cooking, or in the background while you work. If you still want a written record, every session is saved as a searchable transcript you can export afterwards.

Driverless capture from any app

VoxisLive captures whatever audio your Windows PC is playing using WASAPI process-loopback, so it does not care which app produces the sound. Podcasts streaming in Spotify, the Apple Podcasts web player, Pocket Casts on the desktop, a browser tab, or a YouTube episode all play through the same system audio mix.

There is no file to import and no URL to paste — VoxisLive works on live audio only. Start a session, press play on the episode, and it translates as the sound streams.

No virtual audio cable required

Unlike tools that make you route sound through a virtual device, VoxisLive reads the system audio mix directly. There is no VB-CABLE, no virtual audio device, and no driver install. Install it from the Microsoft Store with no reboot and start listening.

It also excludes its own translated voice from what it captures, so it never re-translates the audio it just spoke. This driverless approach is the core difference from setups that force you to configure routing before you hear a single word.

79 languages, your choice per show

VoxisLive supports 79 target languages. You pick the language you want to hear the podcast in, and the cloud model translates the incoming speech into a spoken voice in that language.

You can change the target language between sessions to suit whatever show you are listening to, so a Spanish interview and a Japanese tech podcast are equally at home.

Save, search, and export the transcript

Captions are not the main output, but every session is stored as a searchable transcript. When an episode ends, you can export it to TXT, SRT, or VTT — handy for pulling quotes, building show notes, or keeping citations.

For video and game audio, a one-way Video/Game mode ducks the original track under the translation so the spoken interpretation stays clearly on top.

Prepaid minutes or an open-source BYOK build

VoxisLive runs on prepaid minutes, so you only pay for the time you actually translate — no subscription lock-in. See current rates and bundles on the pricing page.

If you would rather bring your own keys, an open-source BYOK build is available on GitHub. Either way, you can install VoxisLive from the Microsoft Store and start translating podcasts in minutes.

FAQ

Common questions

01Can VoxisLive translate a podcast from any app, like Spotify or a web player?
Yes. VoxisLive captures whatever audio your Windows PC is playing through its WASAPI process-loopback, so it does not care which app produces the sound. Podcasts streaming in Spotify, Apple Podcasts on the web, a browser tab, Pocket Casts desktop, or a YouTube episode all play through the same system audio mix. Start a session, press play on the episode, and VoxisLive translates it as it streams. There is no file import and no URL to paste — it works on live audio only.
02Do I need a virtual audio cable to translate a podcast?
No. VoxisLive uses Windows WASAPI process-loopback to read the system audio mix directly, so it needs no VB-CABLE, no virtual audio device, and no driver install. It also excludes its own translated output from what it captures, so it never re-translates the voice it just spoke. This driverless capture is the core difference from tools that require you to route audio through a virtual cable first.
03Does VoxisLive give me subtitles or a spoken translation of the podcast?
The primary output is spoken. VoxisLive plays a natural-voice translation in your target language while the episode runs, using a native simultaneous interpreter that stays a few seconds behind the speaker. Captions are not the main output, but every session is saved as a searchable transcript you can export to TXT, SRT, or VTT afterwards if you want a written record for notes or citations.
04How many languages can VoxisLive translate podcasts into?
VoxisLive supports 79 target languages. You pick the language you want to hear the podcast in, and the cloud model translates the incoming speech into a spoken voice in that language. You can change the target language between sessions to suit whatever show you are listening to.
05How much does it cost to translate podcasts with VoxisLive?
VoxisLive uses prepaid minutes, so you pay only for the time you translate rather than a subscription. You can check current rates on the pricing page, or use the open-source BYOK build with your own keys.
Free to try · 10 minutes on us

Hear every language, in real time.

Runs on Windows 10 and 11 — no drivers, no setup ritual, no bot in your call.