Evaluating a voice should not mean committing to a recurring plan before you know whether the script, pronunciation, and tone work together.
Vois lets you audition the production workflow locally, then use export credits when an occasional project is ready to leave the app. You can hear the real script, revise the line that misses, arrange the approved take, and pay for export only when you decide to ship it.
The Problem With Locking Generation Behind a Paywall
Here's the scenario. You're a solo creator evaluating voice AI tools. You sign up for a cloud platform, enter your credit card, and generate a few test clips. Some voices don't fit. Some pronunciations are wrong. Some scripts need rewriting because they don't sound right when read aloud.
By the time you've figured out what works, you've burned through a chunk of your free credits or trial allocation. And you haven't produced a single piece of finished content yet.
This is what we call the "preview tax." You're paying to experiment. The actual production is the easy part. Getting there is where the money goes.
How export credits work
Use the free trial to test the core Vois workflow with your actual material. When you have an approved file to deliver, an export credit covers one export in the format you choose. Credits do not expire, so an occasional creator can keep them for the project that needs them.
The current pack options and availability live on the pricing page. That is the right place to check before you buy, because one-time purchase options can change.
Choose the purchase model that matches the project
Some people need Vois for one prototype, course module, pilot episode, or short set of dialogue. For that kind of work, an export credit avoids a recurring commitment while still letting the producer review the real audio before delivery.
If you publish regularly, a Subscriber or Pro plan removes export counting and adds the broader production workflow for ongoing projects. The useful distinction is not "cheap" versus "expensive." It is whether you have a one-off deliverable or a repeatable output schedule.
What to review before you export
The trial is for more than picking a pleasant voice. Use it to review the parts that affect the finished file:
- script clarity and factual accuracy
- voice fit for the intended audience
- pronunciation of names, brands, and technical terms
- speaker changes and pacing
- timeline spacing and mastering
- the final format required by the destination
Subscriber and Pro plans add unlimited exports. Pro adds Omni and Voice Design. Check the pricing page for the current entitlement details before you select a path.
Prompt your agent before you spend an export credit
Ask an AI writing agent to prepare the script for a review, not to decide that it is ready:
Review this narration for spoken clarity. Keep every factual claim, required name, and citation unchanged. List terms that need a pronunciation check, flag sentences that may need a pause, and give me a short approval checklist. Do not rewrite the facts or mark the audio approved.
Then use this human flow in Vois:
- Paste the approved script and select a voice that fits the audience.
- Generate a short section first and check the flagged terms in context.
- Correct the text, pronunciation, timing, or voice choice, then regenerate the affected section.
- Arrange and master the approved take, then listen to the final file against its visual or delivery context.
- Use an export credit only after the producer signs off on the file.
Why the model differs from per-character generation
Per-character services make every full generation part of the allowance. That can be reasonable for a small test, but it also means revisions and alternate voices change the amount you consume.
With Vois, use the trial and in-app playback to decide whether the script works, then use a credit for the approved export. The distinction matters because generation is part of the creative review, not a disposable preview. Review current terms on the pricing page instead of relying on an old competitor comparison.
When to use credits or a subscription
Credits fit a single project, a few approved exports, or a first production test. A subscription fits a recurring schedule, multiple active projects, voice cloning, and teams that need unlimited exports as part of the normal review cycle.
Both paths use the same Vois studio. Start with the workflow you have now, then move to the option that supports the work you actually ship.
Finish the project, then choose the next workflow
Export credits are for a completed decision, not for rushing a half-reviewed take out of the editor. Keep the source script, approvals, and final file together so an update has a clear path back into Vois.
Get started with one real script, use the audio export tools to review the finished take, and check pricing when you are ready to choose credits or a subscription.
-- Praney