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June 12, 2026Comparison8 min read

Wispr Flow vs VoiceInk: cross-platform polish or local-first Mac dictation?

Wispr Flow and VoiceInk both help people write faster with voice. Wispr Flow emphasizes polished cross-platform voice AI, while VoiceInk emphasizes local-first privacy, open source principles, and lifetime Mac pricing.

Wispr Flow logo for AI voice typing

Wispr Flow

VoiceInk icon for private macOS AI dictation

VoiceInk

Short answer

Choose Wispr Flow if you want a polished subscription voice AI product across Mac, Windows, iPhone, and Android. Choose VoiceInk if you are on Apple Silicon Mac, care deeply about local transcription and privacy, and prefer one-time lifetime pricing. Dictor is another option if you want accessible pricing, mobile keyboard workflows, and OpenRouter BYOK.

Key takeaways

Wispr Flow is broader across platforms and includes a subscription that syncs across supported devices.

VoiceInk is Mac-focused, privacy-first, open source, and lists lifetime licenses starting at $25.

VoiceInk requires Apple Silicon Macs and macOS 14.4 or later according to its official page.

Dictor belongs in the shortlist for users who want iPhone and Android keyboard correction plus BYOK control on desktop.

Wispr Flow optimizes for a polished voice habit

Wispr Flow is designed to let people speak naturally and get polished text in the apps where they already work. Its public materials emphasize Mac, Windows, iPhone, and Android support.

The Pro plan is positioned for unlimited words across supported platforms, with command mode, priority support, and team features.

VoiceInk optimizes for privacy and Mac ownership

VoiceInk describes itself as a macOS dictation app that uses local AI models for private transcription. It also highlights offline processing, open source development, personal dictionary features, contextual awareness, and enhancement modes.

Its lifetime pricing makes it attractive to users who do not want another subscription and who are comfortable staying inside the Apple Silicon Mac requirement.

Dictor note for practical daily typing

Dictor focuses on making AI approachable. It is built as a complete platform with desktop workflows and a mobile keyboard for iPhone and Android.

That matters for users who want AI correction and dictation directly where they type, without turning AI into something complicated or intimidating.

Animated Dictor keyboard demo

A quick look at the Dictor mobile keyboard workflow

The keyboard listens, turns speech into text, and can quickly clean up grammar, punctuation, and wording without forcing the user to leave the app where they are typing.

iPhone keyboardAndroid keyboardDictationCorrection
hey can you send the report i finish it tonight maybe around 8
BeforeAfter

hey can you send the report i finish it tonight maybe around 8

Hi, can you send the report? I should finish it tonight, around 8.

Ready anywhere

Wispr Flow vs VoiceInk comparison

This comparison uses public information available on June 19, 2026. Always verify official pages before buying.

Criteria
Wispr Flow
VoiceInk
Pricing
Free plan plus Pro listed at $12 per user per month billed annually.
Lifetime licenses listed at $25, $39, and $49 depending on number of macOS devices.
Platforms
Mac, Windows, iPhone, and Android.
Apple Silicon Macs with macOS 14.4 or later.
Privacy
Includes privacy mode and business trust messaging in public pricing materials.
Local transcription and offline-first positioning, with optional cloud enhancement if enabled.
Best fit
People who want broad device support and a polished voice AI subscription.
Mac users who want privacy-first local dictation and one-time pricing.
Dictor note
Dictor is worth comparing if you want desktop dictation plus iPhone and Android keyboard workflows.
Dictor also offers optional OpenRouter BYOK on desktop for usage-based AI control.

Where Dictor fits in this comparison

This article mainly compares two other voice AI tools, but Dictor is worth mentioning for people who want a lower cost, a desktop app, iPhone and Android keyboard workflows, and optional OpenRouter BYOK on desktop.

Current OpenRouter prices for Dictor's configured models

Prices below are the public OpenRouter prices found on June 19, 2026 for the model IDs configured in Dictor.

microsoft/mai-transcribe-1.5

Primary dictation and mobile transcription model

$0.36 per hour

About $0.06 for 10 minutes of audio before OpenRouter account-level fees or changes.

nvidia/parakeet-tdt-0.6b-v3

Primary meeting transcription model

$0.0015 per minute

About $0.015 for 10 minutes of audio before OpenRouter account-level fees or changes.

mistralai/voxtral-mini-transcribe

Speech-to-text fallback model

$0.003 per minute

About $0.03 for 10 minutes of audio before OpenRouter account-level fees or changes.

openai/gpt-oss-120b

Text correction, commands, and coding/chat-style tasks

$0.039 input / $0.18 output per 1M tokens

A short correction request can cost a fraction of a cent, depending on input and output length.

FAQ

Is VoiceInk more private than Wispr Flow?

VoiceInk is explicitly local-first and says voice transcription is processed locally. Wispr Flow has privacy features, but the products use different trust models.

Which product is better for Windows or Android?

Wispr Flow has clearer public support for Windows and Android. VoiceInk is focused on Apple Silicon Mac.

Should I also compare Dictor?

Yes, especially if you want a lower-cost platform with iPhone and Android keyboard workflows and OpenRouter BYOK on desktop.

Sources

Related AI dictation comparisons

Keep comparing tools, pricing, privacy, and mobile keyboard support with these related Dictor guides.

Portrait of Jason Simard Duperré, founder of Dictor.io

Jason Simard Duperré

Founder of Dictor.io

Jason builds Dictor to improve people's lives with AI and teach practical best practices. For him, AI is not an enemy. It is a colleague that can make life easier and help people work more effectively.

View Jason on LinkedIn