
Wispr Flow, an AI-powered dictation startup, released its Android app today. In June 2025, the company debuted its app for iOS after first releasing it on Mac and Windows. The goal of this expansion is to make the tool’s high-speed voice interface available to Android users worldwide, building on its prior releases on Mac, Windows, and iOS.
Wispr Flow was accessible on iOS via a dedicated keyboard. The UI is a little different on Android since a floating bubble allows you to access the dictionary. The process can be started by holding the bubble and dictating, or it can be stopped by pressing the close button once. In addition to dictating, the app cleans up filter words and structures the text according to the app’s context and spoken content, just like on other platforms.
Tanay Kothari, the startup’s co-founder and CEO, stated that they were finally able to create the voice experience we had long desired thanks to Android. He further stated that they can’t expect voice to fully replace typing on mobile devices until the platform is removed.
The software is compatible with other apps and supports translation in more than 100 languages. Wispr Flow said that it has rewritten its infrastructure, making dictation 30% faster than it was previously, along with the release of the Android app.
With its release, Wispr Flow is one of the few AI-powered dictation apps available on Android, aside from Typeless, which released an app for the platform last month. There are a tonne of these apps on desktop and iOS.
The business has also introduced a new model for Hinglish, which is a Hindi and English combination, for Indians who communicate in a mixed-code manner.
For a brief while at launch, Wispr Flow is providing unlimited free dictation on Android. The standard plans for the Pro package ($12–$15/month) allow unlimited usage and advanced capabilities, while the Flow Basic plan normally offers 2,000 words per week on desktop and 1,000 words on mobile.
Kothari created the first voice model for Hinglish out of necessity: when speaking with family and colleagues back home, Hindi and English naturally blend, and no existing tool could capture that mix.
Other important features available on the Android device are
- Floating Bubble Interface: The Android app overlays any application with a floating bubble, in contrast to the iOS version that employs a specialised keyboard. Without switching keyboards, users can dictate text by tapping or holding this bubble.
- AI Auto-Editing: The program automatically eliminates unnecessary words (such as “um” and “uh”), fixes grammar, and contextualises text according to the app being used.
- Global Reach: It works with Android OS 13 or later on smartphones and tablets and supports more than 100 languages.
The business reported that customers have uttered more than 1.3 million English words in the past several days, despite the early launch to a limited number of consumers.
One of the more well-known businesses in the field of AI-powered dictation apps that has also drawn a lot of venture funding interest is Wispr Flow. Menlo Ventures spearheaded the startup’s $30 million fundraising effort in June. The business raised $25 million in a round headed by Notable Capital in November, just a few months later. The business debut comes after a period of rapid expansion for Wispr Flow, which has raised a total of $81 million, with sources estimating that its most recent round was worth $700 million.
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