Voice Changers Compared: 12 Tools Tested (2026 Edition)

We tested 12 voice changers across desktop, mobile, web, and open source. Here's the honest breakdown of what actually works in 2026.

Voice changers cover a huge range of tools in 2026 — from a free system plugin that shifts your pitch by a few semitones to a full neural voice cloning suite that makes you sound like a completely different person. With so many options across different platforms and price points, it’s hard to know where to start.

This guide cuts through the noise. We tested 12 voice changers across desktop, mobile, web, and open-source categories and put the results in a single, honest comparison. You’ll find a quick breakdown of each tool, a full comparison table, use-case recommendations, and answers to the questions people actually search for.

TL;DR

  • For gaming and Discord: VoxBooster or Voicemod — both install cleanly on Windows with no manual driver config
  • For streaming and OBS: VoxBooster (built-in soundboard + OBS integration) or Voicemod Pro
  • For AI voice cloning quality: VoxBooster and Voice.ai lead among polished apps; RVC WebUI leads in raw quality if you don’t mind technical setup
  • For free with no strings: Clownfish (pitch-shift only) or RVC WebUI (open source, technical setup required)
  • For TTS / content production (not real-time): ElevenLabs or Murf
  • For noise suppression only: Krisp or NVIDIA RTX Voice

The 12 Voice Changers We Tested

1. VoxBooster

VoxBooster is a Windows desktop app built for real-time use — gaming, streaming, Discord calls, and recording. The core engine uses RVC (Retrieval-based Voice Conversion) for AI voice cloning, plus traditional pitch-shift and effects for lower-latency scenarios. The integrated soundboard with global hotkeys and OBS integration puts it in a different category from single-feature apps.

Strengths: Clean Windows installer, no manual virtual driver setup, RVC clone quality, built-in Whisper dictation, integrated soundboard with hotkeys that work inside fullscreen games, noise suppression baked in.
Weaknesses: Windows only (no Mac/Linux/mobile). Requires decent hardware for the lowest AI latency.
Pricing: Free trial, then paid plans starting at $6/month. See pricing.

2. Voicemod

Voicemod is the most recognized name in voice changers. It has a large library of pre-built voices and effects, good Discord integration, and a polished UI. The free tier is limited — it rotates a small set of daily free voices, with the full library behind a paywall.

Strengths: Large effect library, active community, works on both Windows and Mac, regular new voices added.
Weaknesses: No real AI voice cloning (effects are pitch-based with processing, not neural), free tier is restrictive, pricier than alternatives for what you get, has had performance complaints on lower-end PCs.
Pricing: Free (limited), Pro ~$45/year.

3. MorphVOX

MorphVOX Pro from Screaming Bee is one of the oldest names in the category. It focuses on clean, lightweight pitch-based voice morphing and includes a basic soundboard. It gets the job done and runs on very modest hardware.

Strengths: Very lightweight, low CPU usage, works on old hardware, solid background noise cancellation for a pitch-shift tool, one-time purchase available.
Weaknesses: No AI/neural cloning, dated UI, less active development compared to newer players, smaller voice library.
Pricing: Free (MorphVOX Junior), Pro ~$40 one-time.

4. Clownfish Voice Changer

Clownfish is a free system-level voice changer for Windows. It integrates at the Windows audio level and works across all apps — Discord, Skype, Steam voice chat — without any per-app configuration. What it does, it does reliably.

Strengths: Completely free, no trial limitations, system-wide integration, lightweight, includes basic effects and text-to-speech.
Weaknesses: No AI cloning, dated design, limited customization, no soundboard.
Pricing: Free. (Website)

5. Voice.ai

Voice.ai (formerly Voiceai) is a real-time AI voice changer with a large library of celebrity and character voices. It runs a free tier with cloud-based processing and a paid tier with local processing for lower latency. The AI quality on voice conversion is genuinely good.

Strengths: Large AI voice library, free tier available, works in real-time, good conversion quality on the paid tier.
Weaknesses: Free tier uses cloud processing (adds latency and privacy concerns), requires account sign-in, can be resource-heavy.
Pricing: Free (cloud), paid plans starting around $8/month.

6. RVC WebUI

RVC (Retrieval-based Voice Conversion) is an open-source AI voice conversion framework originally developed by the community. It’s what powers the neural engine in several commercial apps including VoxBooster. Running it directly gives maximum quality and full control — but setup requires Python, CUDA drivers, and comfort with the command line.

Strengths: Best raw AI quality available, free and open source, fully local (no cloud), supports custom model training with just a few minutes of audio.
Weaknesses: Technical setup (Python + CUDA), no polished UI, real-time mode requires additional tooling, not suitable for non-technical users.
Pricing: Free. (GitHub)

7. Krisp

Krisp is not a voice changer — it’s a noise cancellation layer that sits between your microphone and any app. It removes background noise, room echo, and secondary voices from your audio in real time. It’s the most reliable standalone noise suppressor available.

Strengths: Best-in-class noise suppression, works with any app, very easy setup, minimal latency overhead.
Weaknesses: No voice effects or cloning at all, the free tier limits daily minutes, pricing is aimed at business users.
Pricing: Free (60 min/day), Pro ~$8/month.

8. NVIDIA RTX Voice / NVIDIA Broadcast

NVIDIA RTX Voice (now part of NVIDIA Broadcast) is free noise suppression and background removal powered by NVIDIA’s Tensor Cores. Audio noise cancellation quality is excellent. It also handles webcam background removal.

Strengths: Free for RTX GPU owners, excellent noise cancellation quality, low latency noise removal, includes video features.
Weaknesses: Requires NVIDIA RTX GPU (GTX with limited support via workaround), no voice effects or cloning.
Pricing: Free with RTX GPU.

9. Murf

Murf is a cloud-based AI voice generator aimed at content creators and businesses. You type text, select a voice, and get high-quality audio rendered. It’s not a real-time voice changer — you can’t use it in Discord calls or games.

Strengths: Very high TTS quality, large voice library across many languages, studio-quality output for narration and voiceovers.
Weaknesses: Not real-time (no live voice changing), cloud-based only, expensive for high usage.
Pricing: Free (limited), paid plans from ~$19/month.

10. ElevenLabs

ElevenLabs is the leading AI voice platform for TTS and voice cloning in the content production sense. You can clone a voice from samples and generate speech from text with exceptional realism. Like Murf, it’s for rendered audio — not live conversation.

Strengths: Best TTS quality available, realistic voice cloning from short samples, excellent API for developers.
Weaknesses: No real-time output, high per-character cost at scale, cloud-only, overkill for gaming/Discord use.
Pricing: Free tier (limited), paid plans from ~$5/month for low usage.

11. MagicMic

MagicMic (iMyFone) is a Windows/Mac voice changer with a library of AI voices, effects, and a built-in soundboard. It targets the same gaming and streaming audience as Voicemod, with a similar feature set.

Strengths: Works on Windows and Mac, includes soundboard, large effect library, decent AI voice selection.
Weaknesses: Real-world AI voice quality is inconsistent, UI feels cluttered, pricing is not clearly communicated, has received mixed reviews on stability.
Pricing: Free (limited), paid from ~$12.95/month.

12. Lyrebird / Descript Overdub

Lyrebird was acquired by Descript and lives on as Overdub — their voice cloning feature for podcast and video editing. You train a model on your own voice and can replace words in existing recordings. It’s a post-production tool, not a real-time voice changer.

Strengths: Seamless integration with Descript for podcast editing, your voice clone can fix recording mistakes.
Weaknesses: No real-time output, tied entirely to the Descript platform, expensive for full access.
Pricing: Included in Descript plans from ~$24/month.


Full Comparison Table

ToolTypePlatformPriceReal-timeAI/RVCLatencyDriver Required
VoxBoosterFull suiteWindows$6+/moYesYes (RVC)~250–450ms (AI), <30ms (FX)No
VoicemodEffects + libraryWin/MacFree / $45/yrYesNo (pitch-based)<50msNo
MorphVOX ProPitch morphWindowsFree / $40 onceYesNo<30msNo
ClownfishPitch effectsWindowsFreeYesNo<30msNo
Voice.aiAI voicesWin/MacFree / $8+/moYesYes200–500msNo
RVC WebUIAI cloningWin/LinuxFreeYes (with tools)Yes (RVC)200–600msNo
KrispNoise cancelWin/MacFree / $8/moYesNo<20msNo
NVIDIA BroadcastNoise cancelWindowsFree (RTX GPU)YesNo<20msNo
MurfTTS studioWeb$19+/moNoYesN/A (rendered)No
ElevenLabsTTS + cloneWeb/APIFree / $5+/moNoYesN/A (rendered)No
MagicMicEffects + AIWin/Mac$12.95+/moYesPartial100–400msNo
Lyrebird/OverdubPost-productionWeb$24+/mo (Descript)NoYesN/A (rendered)No

Voice Changers for Gaming

For gaming, the constraints are strict: low latency (so teammates can understand you without awkward delays), system-wide hotkeys (so you can trigger soundboard clips without alt-tabbing), and stability under load while your GPU is busy rendering the game.

VoxBooster was built with this in mind. Its effects mode keeps latency under 30ms for pitch and filter effects, while the AI mode gives you the option of neural voice cloning when latency budget allows. The soundboard runs global hotkeys that work inside any fullscreen game, and the software doesn’t noticeably impact frame rates on mid-range hardware.

Voicemod is the popular choice here — large community, lots of gaming-specific voice presets (“Minion voice,” “Dark Vader,” “squeaky gamer”), and it has been around long enough that most games’ voice chat systems have been tested with it. If you want something that just works with no surprises, Voicemod is a safe pick.

MorphVOX is worth mentioning for anyone on older hardware. It’s been around since the mid-2000s and runs on minimal CPU resources, making it viable on PCs where other tools would stutter.

For gaming, avoid anything that does cloud processing. Round-trip latency from cloud voice processing ranges from 500ms to 2 seconds — teammates will notice.


Voice Changers for Streaming (Twitch / Kick / YouTube Live)

Streaming adds requirements that gaming alone doesn’t: OBS integration, the ability to create clean separations between your microphone track and your voice-changed track, and a reliable soundboard for reaction clips and alerts.

VoxBooster handles this with native OBS integration — it appears as a selectable audio source inside OBS without extra config. You can run your soundboard on a separate track from your voice, giving you full control in post-production if you record locally. See our voice changer for streaming guide for a detailed OBS setup walkthrough.

Voicemod also integrates with OBS and has a dedicated “streaming mode” that separates voice output and soundboard output. Its library of licensed sound effects is a plus for streamers who want to avoid DMCA issues.

For streamers who want to go further with character voices — building a VTuber persona or running a character-based stream — VoxBooster’s RVC cloning lets you train a custom character voice and switch to it live. See how to become a VTuber for the full persona-building process.


Voice Changers for Discord

Discord is the most common use case for voice changers, and it’s where most people first try one. The good news: Discord treats your voice changer output as just another microphone, so almost any real-time voice changer will work.

The setup varies by tool:

  • VoxBooster and Voicemod both set up the audio routing automatically — after installing, Discord will see a new virtual mic input. No manual configuration.
  • MorphVOX and Clownfish require you to select the output device in Discord’s audio settings, but the process is a one-time step.
  • RVC WebUI requires additional virtual audio cable software to route the output to Discord.

For Discord-specific guides, see voice changer Discord setup and how to use voice changer on Discord.

If you want voice filters rather than full voice replacement — things like reverb, pitch correction, or a subtle deepening effect — Discord voice filters are worth checking out as a lightweight alternative.


Voice Changers for Content Creators and VTubers

Content creators have different needs from gamers. The priority shifts from real-time performance to voice quality, consistency across a long session, and the ability to record clean audio that holds up in post-production.

VoxBooster covers the content creator use case with Whisper-based speech-to-text for captioning, the RVC clone for consistent character voices, and a noise suppression layer that keeps your audio clean in home studio environments.

ElevenLabs and Murf are worth considering for any pre-recorded content — YouTube narration, podcast intros, explainer videos. Their rendered audio quality is noticeably better than what any real-time tool produces, because they’re not constrained by latency requirements. If you’re doing a voiceover for a video rather than talking live, a TTS tool beats a real-time voice changer on quality every time.

For VTubers specifically, the consistency of an RVC-based tool matters a lot. A neural voice model holds a character’s timbre across hours of streaming without drift. How to make a VTuber avatar covers the visual side; VoxBooster handles the voice.


Which Voice Changer Should You Choose?

Here’s a straightforward decision guide:

You want the best overall package for Windows with real-time AI: Download VoxBooster — RVC cloning, soundboard, noise suppression, OBS integration, and dictation in one installer.

You want the most popular option with the largest effect library: Voicemod. Big community, lots of documentation, widely tested with games and streaming apps.

You need something free with zero limitations: Clownfish for pitch effects (fully free), or RVC WebUI if you’re technical and want AI quality without paying anything.

You only need noise cancellation, not voice effects: Krisp if you’re on any GPU, NVIDIA Broadcast if you have an RTX card.

You’re producing content (not live): ElevenLabs or Murf for TTS quality, Descript/Overdub for voice clone editing of your own recordings.

You want open source with maximum control: RVC WebUI — expect to spend an hour on setup, then enjoy results that match or beat commercial tools.


Common Mistakes When Choosing a Voice Changer

Confusing pitch shift with AI voice changing. These are different technologies with different results. Pitch shift is instant but sounds artificial. AI voice changers use neural models to actually replace your timbre — they sound more convincing but need more CPU/GPU.

Ignoring latency specs. A 600ms delay is fine for a voiceover recording. In a live Discord conversation, it’s disorienting. Always check if the latency is compatible with your use case before committing.

Overlooking hardware requirements. RVC-based AI cloning on a machine without a dedicated GPU will produce latency of 800ms+, which makes real-time conversation painful. Check minimum requirements before downloading.

Paying for features you won’t use. If you only want to sound like a robot in Among Us, you don’t need AI voice cloning. Clownfish is free and handles that case perfectly.


Conclusion

Voice changers in 2026 range from a free system plugin to a professional AI suite, and the right choice comes down to three things: your use case (gaming vs. streaming vs. content creation), your hardware, and how much setup complexity you’re willing to handle.

For most people who want real-time AI voice changing on Windows with the least friction, VoxBooster hits the right balance — download it and try it free before committing to a subscription. If you want to compare specific plans, the pricing page breaks down what’s included at each tier.

For more in-depth comparisons, see:

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