Generate terrifying horror narration with AI voices built for fear. Slow, deep, whispered — choose from creepypasta, true-crime, and horror-podcast presets. Create spine-chilling audio in English, Hindi, Tamil, and more.
Choose from Horror, Bedtime, ASMR, and more — each auto-configures voice, speed, and style.
Write or paste your script. Add expression tags like [whispering] or [short pause] for extra drama.
One tap to generate studio-quality audio. Download as MP3/WAV and use anywhere.
Each preset auto-configures voice, speed, and style. What you hear below is exactly what you'll get in the app.
Measured, ominous narrator for horror anthology-style content
The house at the end of Maplewood Lane had been empty for eleven years. The neighbours said no one had died there. But every night at exactly three fifteen, the porch light turned on by itself. And if you looked closely... someone was standing in the window.
Slow, intimate whisper for creepypasta and sleep horror
I need to tell you something, but you have to promise not to turn around. There's been someone standing behind you for the last three minutes. I can see them over your shoulder. They haven't moved. They haven't blinked. But they're smiling.
Controlled, detached narrator for true-crime and investigative horror
On the morning of November 14th, a jogger found a pair of shoes arranged neatly at the edge of the reservoir. Inside the left shoe was a folded note. The police never released what it said. But three detectives requested transfers within the week.
Horror is one of the fastest-growing audio genres on the internet. Creepypasta channels on YouTube pull millions of views per video. Horror podcasts like "The NoSleep Podcast," "Lore," and "Darknet Diaries" have built empires on nothing but a narrator's voice and a well-written script. In India, shows like Bhoot FM, Bhay Podcast, and Radio Mirchi's horror specials prove that desi audiences crave scary stories just as much as anyone else.
But here is the problem every horror creator faces: the voice has to be perfect. Horror narration is not regular narration spoken in a dark room. It requires specific pacing — slower than normal, with deliberate pauses that let dread build. It needs tonal control — dropping to a whisper at critical moments, then rising just enough to make the listener's skin crawl. Getting this right with your own voice requires vocal training, a treated recording space, and hours of post-production.
VoisLabs horror presets are engineered specifically for fear. The creepypasta preset runs at 0.7x speed with the Aoede voice — a low, intimate whisper that sounds like someone telling you a secret they shouldn't. The horror-podcast preset uses Sadachbia at 0.8x, delivering a measured, ominous narrator that recalls classic horror anthology shows. The true-crime preset runs Enceladus at 0.9x — serious, controlled, and unsettling in its detachment.
These are not generic TTS voices with a reverb filter slapped on top. The pacing, breath patterns, and tonal quality are tuned for horror from the ground up.
VoisLabs expression tags give you granular control over emotional delivery:
[whisper] — Drop to an intimate, breathy whisper. Perfect for "the thing was standing right behind me" moments.[dramatic] — Heighten intensity for reveals and climactic scenes.[calm] — Eerie, detached calm that is often scarier than shouting.Combine these with slow speed settings and strategic pauses using ... to create narration that genuinely unsettles listeners.
Creepypasta & Short Horror Stories — The bread and butter of horror YouTube. Write or adapt a story, generate the narration, layer it over ambient sounds, and publish. Channels like "Lazy Masquerade" and "Mr. Nightmare" built audiences of millions with exactly this format.
Horror Podcasts — Launch a horror podcast without investing in a studio. Generate episodes, add background music and sound effects in Audacity or GarageBand, and distribute on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
Indian Horror Content — The Indian horror space is massively underserved. Creators making content in Hindi, Tamil, Malayalam, and Bengali face almost zero competition compared to English horror channels. VoisLabs supports all major Indian languages, so you can narrate bhoot stories, urban legends from Indian cities, and regional folklore in the audience's native language.
Sleep Horror & ASMR Horror — A growing niche where slow, whispered horror stories help listeners drift off to sleep. The creepypasta preset at 0.7x speed is tailor-made for this format.
Most "scary voice" tools online are just pitch-shifting filters — they take a normal voice and lower the pitch or add echo. The result sounds cartoonish, not frightening. Genuine horror narration is about performance: the timing of a pause, the restraint in delivery, the way a sentence trails off into silence. VoisLabs AI voices are trained on expressive speech, not modified after the fact. The fear is baked in.
VoisLabs is free to use — no sign-up required. Paste your horror script, select a horror preset, and generate the audio. Download the MP3 and start building your horror channel today.
These scripts are ready to paste. The audio below was generated with VoisLabs.
St. Catherine's Hospital closed in 1987 after a fire swept through the east wing. Fourteen patients died. The official cause was faulty wiring. But the night nurse on duty — the only survivor from that wing — told a different story. She said the fire started in Room 714. A room that had been locked and sealed since 1983. A room that, according to hospital records, did not exist. I went there last October. The building is gutted now — black walls, collapsed ceilings, water damage everywhere. But Room 714 was pristine. The bed was made. The IV stand was upright. And on the nightstand, there was a glass of water. It was still cold.
Copy this script and paste it in VoisLabs to hear the exact same result.
My phone rang at 3:07 AM. The caller ID showed my own number. I almost didn't answer. But something — curiosity, maybe stupidity — made me swipe right. The voice on the other end was mine. Not a recording. It was speaking in real time, and it said: "Don't open the bedroom door. It's already inside the apartment. It came in through the window you forgot to lock. If you stay perfectly still and don't make a sound, it will leave by sunrise." The call ended. I sat frozen in bed, phone pressed against my chest. Then I heard it — soft footsteps in the hallway. They stopped right outside my door. The handle turned. Slowly.
Copy this script and paste it in VoisLabs to hear the exact same result.
Like what you hear? Try these presets with your own text.
Start Creatingarrow_forwardUse Pauses to Build Dread
Insert ... in your script to create natural pauses. Horror lives in the silence between sentences:
She opened the basement door... The smell hit her first. Then the sound. A wet, rhythmic tapping... coming from below.
Layer Expression Tags
Start a scene with [calm] for eerie detachment, switch to [whisper] for intimate fear, then hit [dramatic] for the reveal:
[calm]The hallway was empty.[whisper]Or at least... it should have been.[dramatic]Because standing at the far end was a figure that hadn't been there a second ago.
Speed Matters More Than You Think
Slower speeds give listeners time to imagine, which is where real fear lives.
Add Ambient Sound After Export Generate the voiceover in VoisLabs, then layer it over ambient horror sounds (rain, creaking wood, distant thunder) in Audacity or GarageBand. Keep ambient volume at 15–20% of voice volume — it should be felt, not consciously heard.
Sign up free and start generating studio-quality audio in seconds.
Start Creatingarrow_forward