7 Best Wispr Flow Alternatives in 2026 (Tested)

7 Best Wispr Flow Alternatives in 2026 (Tested)

I used Wispr Flow for months and mostly liked it. Then I went looking for something else, and it turned out I wasn’t the only one. The phrase “Wispr Flow alternatives” gets searched for a reason, and the reason isn’t that Wispr Flow is bad. It’s that one design decision, the thing that makes it simple, also makes it a non-starter for a lot of people.

Wispr Flow is cloud-only. Every word you say goes to a server to be processed, and there is no offline mode at any price. If you write anything confidential, travel through dead zones, or just don’t love the idea of your dictation leaving your machine, that’s the wall you hit. It’s the most common reason I see people start hunting for Wispr Flow alternatives, and it’s a fair one.

So I tested the field. I ran every serious option through my actual work for at least a week each, on both Windows and a Mac, and ranked the seven I’d actually recommend. Some are more private. Some are cheaper. One is open-source and basically free. I’ll be specific about where each one beats Wispr and where it doesn’t.

One disclosure up front, because you’d find out anyway: I’m involved with Contextli, which is my number-one pick below. A founder ranking his own tool first should earn your suspicion, so read the reasoning, not the ranking. I’ve credited every rival’s real strengths and named Contextli’s gaps too.

The short version (quick picks)

If you don’t want the full 4,000 words, here’s where I landed after testing every Wispr Flow alternative worth a look:

  • Best overall, and the one I’d switch to: Contextli. Cross-platform, transforms your speech into finished text, and runs fully offline if you need it.
  • Best for Mac power users: Superwhisper.
  • Best for developers: Aqua Voice.
  • Closest like-for-like to Wispr Flow: Willow Voice.
  • Cheapest serious option: VoiceInk, open-source and $25 once.

The rest of this piece is the why, plus the honest trade-offs behind each pick.

What Wispr Flow gets right (so we’re fair)

Credit where it’s due, because pretending the thing you’re replacing is garbage is how you lose a reader’s trust.

Wispr Flow is the most polished voice to text software in this category, and it isn’t close. Onboarding is smooth, the AI cleanup is genuinely good at killing filler words and turning a rambling thought into something tidy, and it runs on Mac, Windows, iOS, and Android off one account [5]. It transforms your speech instead of just transcribing it, so you get a finished message rather than a wall of “ums.” The accessibility community has real reasons to love it, and the 4.8 out of 5 from more than 8,500 ratings on the iOS App Store is earned [6].

If none of the problems below apply to you, honestly, you might not need an alternative at all. But if even one of them does, keep reading.

Why people go looking for Wispr Flow alternatives

The complaints are consistent, and they’re the reason this article exists.

It’s cloud-only. This is the big one. There’s no offline mode, so it stops dead on a plane or a bad connection, and every word travels to a server to get processed. For legal, medical, or any NDA-bound work, that alone rules it out.

There was a privacy scare. A viral thread last year alleged Wispr was quietly capturing screenshots of your active window every few seconds for “context.” The company later made that training opt-in and the CTO apologized publicly, but it spooked a lot of people, and it’s why the screenshot question still comes up [6].

Reliability slips after the trial. The pattern in reviews is a strong trial followed by “it works about 60% of the time.” That split shows up in the ratings: 4.8 on the App Store, but 2.7 out of 5 on Trustpilot, where the recurring word is reliability [6]. There was also a multi-day latency outage in late May 2026.

Windows gets the worse build. On Windows it’s a heavier Electron app, and people report it freezing the program they’re dictating into, including VS Code, plus high memory use.

The price, with no escape hatch. It’s $15 a month, or $12 a month if you pay yearly, and there is no lifetime option. If you’re a heavy daily user, that meter never stops.

None of that makes Wispr a bad tool. It makes it the wrong tool for a specific, large group of people. If you’re in that group, here’s what I’d use instead.

How I tested

Not a lab. My actual job, run through each tool for at least a week, on the work I really do.

I dictated the same things into every Wispr Flow alternative on this list, and into Wispr Flow itself as the speech to text software baseline: a cold-ish client email, a messy Slack standup, a Jira ticket, a long section like this one, and a few voice notes with background noise and some technical terms thrown in to see what broke. I ran all of them on both a Windows machine and a Mac, because a lot of this category quietly assumes you own a MacBook, and Wispr Flow itself runs on Windows, so its alternatives should be judged there too.

I scored each tool on six things, weighted by how much they matter day to day:

  • Transform quality (25%): finished text I can send, or just my words back?
  • Privacy and offline (20%): can it run without shipping my audio to a server?
  • Platform coverage (15%): everywhere I work, or Mac-only?
  • Accuracy (15%): how often do I fix what it heard?
  • Pricing and value (15%): real cost, including the sneaky parts?
  • Setup and friction (10%): how fast is it out of my way?

Scores are out of 10, weighted. Prices and ratings are current as of mid-2026 and move constantly, so check the source links before you buy.

The 7 best Wispr Flow alternatives at a glance

RankToolBest forTransforms?Offline mode?PlatformsStarting priceScore
1ContextliThe all-round switch, plus privacy and WindowsYesYes, fullyWin, Mac, iOS, AndroidFree; $9/mo9.1
2SuperwhisperMac power users who want every modelYesYes (Mac)Mac, Win, iOSFree; ~$8.49/mo8.0
3Aqua VoiceDevelopers and AI-tool usersYesNoMac, Win, iOSFree; $8/mo7.7
4Willow VoiceThe closest like-for-like to Wispr FlowYesPartialMac, Win, iOSFree; $15/mo7.5
5TypelessCross-platform, the only real Android optionYesNoWin, Mac, iOS, AndroidFree; $12/mo7.3
6VoiceInkThe cheap, open-source, local pickYesYes (Mac)Mac$25 once7.1
7SpokenlyBring-your-own-key at zero markupYesYes (Mac)Mac, iOSFree; $9.99/mo7.0

Starting price is the lowest regularly advertised rate. Contextli, Willow, and Spokenly figures are month-to-month; Aqua and Superwhisper quote their rate on annual billing. Annual plans are cheaper across the board, and VoiceInk and Contextli also sell one-time options.

Now the why behind each placement.

1. Contextli: the all-round switch (and the most private)

If your reason for leaving Wispr Flow is privacy, platforms, or both, this is the one I’d start with, and not only because I built it.

Here’s the core difference. Contextli changes what it writes based on where you’re writing. You pick a Context (a saved mode: Email, Slack, Jira, code review, a clinical SOAP note, whatever you build). You can make as many as you want, since custom Contexts are unlimited on every plan, including the free one. You press a hotkey from inside whatever app you’re already in, you talk, and it transcribes, reshapes the text to fit that Context, and pastes the finished result straight back where your cursor was. You never left the window.

Here’s the loop it kills, the same one Wispr’s AI cleanup half-solves. Getting a decent message out of a chatbot is normally a seven-step detour: open ChatGPT in another tab, type out your intent, wait for the answer, read it, copy it, switch back to your app, then paste and fix the formatting. Contextli collapses that into one hotkey. Hold the key, say the thing, and the finished version is already where your cursor was.

Let me show you instead of telling you. Here’s a messy standup update, said out loud:

Voice input: “Tell the team the deploy slipped to Thursday, the API migration took longer than I thought, nobody’s blocked by it, and I’ll post the new timeline in the morning.”

With the Slack Context selected, that comes back ready to send, not as a transcript of me thinking out loud:

Quick update on the deploy: it’s slipped to Thursday. The API migration took longer than expected, but nobody’s blocked in the meantime. I’ll post the updated timeline first thing tomorrow morning. Shout if that timing causes anyone a problem.

Switch the Context to a Jira ticket and the same sentence comes out as a structured ticket instead. That is the whole point, and it’s a level past what Wispr’s one-size cleanup does.

Now the part that actually wins the switch: privacy. Contextli runs in three modes. Cloud, if you just want speed. Bring-your-own-key, where your audio goes from your machine straight to your own provider account (Deepgram, OpenAI, Anthropic, and others) and never touches Contextli’s servers. Or fully offline, where transcription and the AI rewriting both run locally and nothing leaves your computer. You can run it in airplane mode. That is the exact thing Wispr cannot do at any price, and it’s why the lawyers and clinicians I know will touch Contextli and won’t touch a cloud-only tool. See the privacy approach for how the modes differ.

On the screenshot question that burned Wispr: Contextli has an optional screen-context capture too, but it’s off by default and you switch it on yourself. If you never want it, you never see it.

There’s also the bring-your-own-key economics. On Contextli’s lifetime plans, BYOK is unlimited, so you pay your provider’s raw API cost and Contextli takes no per-word cut. For a heavy daily user, that’s the opposite of Wispr’s never-ending $15 a month.

And it runs on Windows, Mac, iOS, and Android. That matches Wispr’s breadth, and the Windows build doesn’t carry the freezing complaints Wispr’s Electron app does.

Pros:

  • Transforms voice into finished, context-appropriate text, not a raw transcript.
  • The only pick here with cloud, bring-your-own-key, and fully offline modes.
  • Unlimited custom Contexts on every tier, including the free one.
  • Runs on Windows, Mac, iOS, and Android, with unlimited BYOK on lifetime plans.

Cons:

  • Younger than Wispr, with a smaller user base (1,000-plus, not millions).
  • No meeting-transcription bot.
  • Offline AI models want a capable machine and a few gigabytes of disk.

Pricing: Free at $0 (100 credits a month, roughly 2,000 words, and even the free tier gets unlimited Contexts). Starter $9 a month or $90 a year. Pro $29 a month or $290 a year, the one most people want, since it unlocks the premium AI models, streaming, and full offline mode. Pro Plus $49 a month or $490 a year for cloud sync across devices. One-time Founding Member lifetime deals run $79 (Starter), $149 (Pro), and $249 (Pro Plus), capped at 950 seats total. Current numbers live on the pricing page.

  • Best for: anyone leaving Wispr Flow over privacy, offline, Windows, or subscription fatigue who still wants finished output, not a transcript.
  • Skip it if: your needs are occasional, or you specifically want a meeting bot.
  • Rating: 4.7/5, with the loudest praise from neurodivergent users and people on hourly billing who got the time back [13].

2. Superwhisper: best for Mac power users

If you’re on a Mac and your reason for leaving Wispr Flow is privacy, Superwhisper is the obvious pick. It runs a big menu of speech models, local ones on Apple Silicon with no internet and cloud ones if you want them, plus custom “modes” that reshape your dictation per app the way Contextli’s Contexts do [7]. It won a Product Hunt privacy award, and it sits at 4.9 out of 5 there.

The trade-off is that it feels like a system you manage rather than a tool that gets out of your way. New users say they feel lost at first. It saves your audio to disk by default, stores API keys in plain text, and its Windows version trails the Mac one badly, so it’s not the Wispr replacement for Windows people. The lifetime price has also reportedly jumped around a lot in 2026, so check it on the day.

Pros:

  • A huge menu of local and cloud dictation models.
  • Custom per-app modes that reshape your output.
  • Strong on-device privacy on Apple Silicon, which Wispr can’t match.

Cons:

  • A steep learning curve.
  • Saves audio to disk by default, and stores API keys in plain text.
  • The Windows version trails the Mac one.

Pricing: Free tier with smaller local models, then Pro at roughly $8.49 a month or about $84.99 a year. A lifetime tier exists but its price has reportedly spiked, so verify before buying.

  • Best for: Mac users who want maximum control and real offline models, and enjoy configuring things.
  • Skip it if: you want something that just works out of the box, or you’re mainly on Windows.
  • Rating: 4.9/5 on Product Hunt [7].

3. Aqua Voice: best for developers

Aqua is faster-feeling than Wispr Flow, and that’s its whole pitch. Words stream onto the screen as you talk instead of arriving in a block, and its own Avalon model is tuned hard for technical and coding vocabulary, which is exactly where generic dictation falls apart [10]. If you live in Cursor or VS Code, Aqua is sharp, and at $8 a month on annual billing it’s cheaper than Wispr Flow. It carries a 5.0 out of 5 on Product Hunt.

The catch is that it doesn’t fix the main reason people leave Wispr: it’s also cloud-only, with no offline mode. The free tier is a tiny one-time 1,000 words, it supports 49 languages against the 100-plus elsewhere, and there’s no HIPAA agreement, so regulated work is out.

Pros:

  • Real-time streaming dictation as you speak.
  • Tuned hard for technical and coding vocabulary.
  • Cheaper than Wispr, with voice editing mid-flow.

Cons:

  • Cloud-only, so it doesn’t solve Wispr’s biggest weakness.
  • A tiny, one-time free tier.
  • 49 languages, and no HIPAA agreement.

Pricing: Free one-time 1,000 words, then Pro at $8 a month billed annually (about $96 a year). No lifetime.

  • Best for: developers and anyone working inside AI tools all day.
  • Skip it if: you need offline, lots of languages, or compliance paperwork.
  • Rating: 5.0/5 on Product Hunt [10].

4. Willow Voice: the closest like-for-like to Wispr Flow

If you liked Wispr Flow and just want something similar but a little different, Willow is the nearest match. It transforms your speech, learns and matches your writing style per Context, and self-corrects in real time when you say “Tuesday, actually Wednesday” [9]. It runs on Mac and added Windows in early 2026. Willow’s own marketing even says “transcription is table stakes,” which tells you the category now agrees on where the value is.

The honest problem: it’s cloud-first, like Wispr, so if privacy is why you’re leaving, Willow only half-helps. Its optional offline mode is a weaker fallback, not the real thing. There’s no Android, and I hit a hotkey conflict with another app. The price matches Wispr almost exactly, so you’re not saving money either.

Pros:

  • Learns and matches your writing style per Context.
  • Real-time self-correction as you talk.
  • A polished experience, now on both Mac and Windows.

Cons:

  • Cloud-first, with only a weak optional offline fallback.
  • No Android.
  • Priced the same as Wispr, so no savings.

Pricing: Free 2,000 words a week, then $15 a month or $12 a month billed annually. Team plans start at $10 per seat on annual billing.

  • Best for: people who liked Wispr Flow’s style-matching and want a close, polished swap on Mac or Windows.
  • Skip it if: offline privacy or Android support is the thing you’re after.
  • Rating: positive on G2 and Product Hunt, though the review volume is still small [9].

5. Typeless: the cross-platform pick with Android

Typeless is the one alternative that matches Wispr Flow’s full platform spread, and it’s the only serious option here with a real Android app. It’s a cross-platform dictation app that transforms your speech, removes filler, and auto-edits across Mac, Windows, iOS, and Android [18]. Its free tier is genuinely generous at 8,000 words a week, far more than Wispr Flow’s 2,000.

Be aware the reputation is split. It scores 5.0 on Product Hunt but around 3.9 on Google Play and roughly 2.6 on Trustpilot [18], so experiences vary by platform. Like Wispr, it’s cloud-based, so it doesn’t solve the offline problem.

Pros:

  • The only pick here with a real Android app, matching Wispr Flow’s spread.
  • A generous 8,000-words-a-week free tier.
  • Transforms and auto-edits, not just transcribes.

Cons:

  • Cloud-based, so no offline privacy win over Wispr.
  • A split reputation across review sites.
  • No lifetime option.

Pricing: Free 8,000 words a week, then Pro at $12 a month billed annually, or $30 a month month-to-month.

  • Best for: people who want Wispr Flow’s cross-platform breadth, especially on Android, with a bigger free tier.
  • Skip it if: offline privacy is the goal.
  • Rating: 5.0 Product Hunt, ~3.9 Google Play, ~2.6 Trustpilot [18].

6. VoiceInk: the cheap, open-source, local pick

If your real objection to Wispr Flow is paying a subscription forever to a cloud, VoiceInk is the antidote. It’s open-source (GPLv3, more than 4,100 GitHub stars), runs fully on-device on Apple Silicon with Whisper and Parakeet models, and costs $25 once for one Mac [18]. You can even build it from source for free. It transcribes locally and offers optional bring-your-own-key cloud cleanup if you want reshaping.

The limits are obvious: it’s Apple-Silicon-only, so no Windows and no iOS, and as a community project its formatting smarts are lighter than a polished commercial tool like Wispr. But for the price of one month of Wispr, you own a private, local dictation tool outright.

Pros:

  • Open-source and fully on-device, the opposite of Wispr’s cloud.
  • $25 once, or free if you build it yourself.
  • Optional bring-your-own-key cloud cleanup.

Cons:

  • Apple-Silicon Macs only, no Windows or iOS.
  • Lighter formatting than a polished commercial tool.
  • You manage model downloads yourself.

Pricing: One-time $25 (1 Mac), $39 (2), or $49 (3). Free if built from source. 7-day trial.

  • Best for: Mac users who want private, local dictation and refuse to rent it monthly.
  • Skip it if: you’re on Windows, or you want hand-holding.
  • Rating: 4,100-plus GitHub stars, the open-source version of a good review [18].

7. Spokenly: bring-your-own-key at zero markup

Spokenly is the pick for people who want cloud-grade accuracy without the cloud markup. It runs free local Whisper and Parakeet models, and it lets you bring your own OpenAI, Deepgram, or Groq key at zero markup, so you pay the provider directly instead of a middleman [18]. It transforms with custom prompts and modes, and it even ships an MCP server for Claude Code and Cursor, which no other tool here does.

It’s Mac and iOS, and its Windows story is inconsistent, so I wouldn’t count on it for Windows. If your reason for leaving Wispr Flow is cost control and provider choice rather than a single polished app, Spokenly is the clever option.

Pros:

  • Free local models plus bring-your-own-key cloud at zero markup.
  • Transforms with custom prompts and modes.
  • An MCP server for Claude Code and Cursor.

Cons:

  • Mac and iOS, with an unreliable Windows story.
  • Less polished onboarding than Wispr.
  • Smaller, newer, with thin third-party reviews.

Pricing: Free local and free bring-your-own-key cloud, then Pro at $9.99 a month for managed cloud across Mac and iPhone.

  • Best for: tinkerers who want provider choice and the lowest running cost.
  • Skip it if: you want one polished cross-platform app that just works.
  • Rating: positioned as privacy-first; third-party review volume is still thin, so judge it on a trial [18].

A few honest non-alternatives

People search “Wispr Flow alternatives” and land on tools that aren’t really competing for the same job. So you don’t waste a download:

MacWhisper is excellent, but it’s for transcribing files (podcasts, interviews, recordings), not live dictation into your apps, and it’s Apple-only [8]. Otter.ai is for meeting notes, where a bot joins your call and summarizes it; it won’t type into the app you’re in [12]. And the built-in tools, Apple Dictation and Windows voice typing with Win plus H, are the free baseline, not a real dictation app, and they only transcribe and never reshape your speech. If you want a true Wispr Flow alternative, the seven above are the list.

The thing to understand before you switch

Whatever you call it, dictation or speech to text software, one distinction decides which alternative is right for you, so let me say it plainly. The tools above differ on two axes, and Wispr Flow sits in one specific corner of them.

The first axis is transcribe versus transform. Does the tool hand you your words, or a finished message? Wispr Flow, Willow, Aqua, Typeless, and Contextli all transform. VoiceInk and the built-ins mostly transcribe unless you add cleanup. If you only get a transcript, you’ve bought a faster typewriter, not time back. The best voice to text software in 2026 has to clear that bar.

The second axis is cloud versus offline. Wispr Flow, Willow, Aqua, and Typeless are cloud-first, so your audio leaves your machine. Superwhisper, VoiceInk, Spokenly, and Contextli can run locally. This axis is the entire reason most people leave Wispr Flow, and it’s the one the cloud alternatives quietly don’t fix.

Contextli is my top pick because it’s the only one that sits in the good corner of both axes at once: it transforms, and it runs fully offline, on every major platform. The others each win one axis. That combination is what I built toward, so take the ranking with that grain of salt and test the free tiers yourself.

How to choose your Wispr Flow alternative

A few honest if-then rules:

If you’re leaving over privacy or offline, your shortlist is Contextli, Superwhisper, or VoiceInk. Contextli if you want it cross-platform and finished; Superwhisper or VoiceInk if you’re Mac-only.

If you’re on Windows, the real answers are Contextli and, to a lesser degree, Willow or Typeless. Superwhisper, VoiceInk, and Spokenly are Mac-first and will let you down there. I go deeper on the Windows angle in a separate piece [INTERNAL LINK: “Best dictation software for Windows” | add mjunaidkhalid.com URL once published].

If you liked Wispr Flow and just want a close swap, Willow. If you’re a developer, Aqua. If you want Android, Typeless. If you want the lowest possible long-term cost, VoiceInk or Spokenly with your own key.

If you’re cross-shopping Wispr Flow against the two most-mentioned Mac tools, I compared them head to head here [INTERNAL LINK: “Wispr Flow vs Superwhisper” | add mjunaidkhalid.com URL once published], and the full best-of roundup across the whole category is here [INTERNAL LINK: “Best voice to text software 2026” pillar | add mjunaidkhalid.com URL once published].

FAQ

What’s the best Wispr Flow alternative in 2026?

For most people, I’d start with Contextli, because it fixes the exact things that push people off Wispr Flow: it runs fully offline, works on Windows as well as Mac, and gives you finished text instead of a transcript. Superwhisper is the best Mac-only alternative, Aqua is best for developers, and Willow is the closest like-for-like swap. The honest answer depends on whether you’re leaving over privacy, platform, or price.

Does Wispr Flow work offline?

No. Wispr Flow is cloud-only, with no offline mode at any tier, so it needs an internet connection and your audio is processed on a server. That’s the single most common reason people look for alternatives. If offline matters, Contextli, Superwhisper, and VoiceInk can all run locally.

Is Wispr Flow safe and private? Does it capture screenshots?

A viral thread alleged Wispr Flow captured active-window screenshots for context. The company made that training opt-in and the CTO apologized publicly. It does carry SOC 2 and a zero-retention Privacy Mode, but because it’s cloud-based, your audio still leaves your device. A tool with a fully offline mode keeps everything local, which is the stronger guarantee for confidential work.

What’s the best Wispr Flow alternative for Windows?

Contextli, because it runs natively on Windows, Mac, iOS, and Android, and the Windows build doesn’t carry the freezing complaints that follow Wispr Flow’s Electron app. Willow and Typeless also run on Windows. Superwhisper, VoiceInk, and Spokenly are Mac-first and not great Windows choices.

Is there a Wispr Flow alternative with a one-time price instead of a subscription?

A few. VoiceInk is $25 once. Superwhisper has a lifetime tier, though its price has reportedly spiked. Contextli sells capped lifetime Founding Member plans at $79, $149, and $249. Wispr Flow itself has no lifetime option, which is part of why heavy users go looking.

Is dictation actually faster than typing?

Yes, clearly. Typing averages around 40 words a minute [2], while a Stanford and Baidu study measured speech input at about three times that, 161 words a minute versus 53, with fewer errors [1]. In practice our users dictate around 250 words a minute once they stop self-editing. The speed isn’t the question; where your audio goes is.

Is Wispr Flow worth it?

If you don’t care about offline, you’re on a good connection, and the price doesn’t bother you, yes, Wispr Flow is genuinely the most polished option. The reason this list exists is that those three conditions don’t hold for a lot of people, and when even one fails, an alternative is the better buy.

The bottom line

If you’re leaving Wispr Flow, get clear on why first. Privacy and offline point you at Contextli, Superwhisper, or VoiceInk. Cost points you at VoiceInk or a bring-your-own-key setup. Wanting a close, polished swap points you at Willow. Android points you at Typeless.

My pick is Contextli, and not only because I built it. It’s the one alternative that fixes Wispr Flow’s biggest weakness, the cloud-only lock-in, while keeping the thing Wispr Flow got right, finished text instead of a transcript, and it does it on every major platform. Try the free tier, talk one messy sentence into it, and see what comes out. That test will tell you more than any ranking, including mine.


About the author: I’m Junaid, a solopreneur with 5+ products, working across marketing, operations, development, and vibe coding, which means I write in a dozen different registers a day. I’ve tested the Wispr Flow alternatives here as my daily driver across all of that, on the machines I actually use. Dictation multiplied my output by around four to five times once I got past the learning curve, but the gaps in the existing tools were real enough that my team and I built our own. What I look for is a dictation tool that produces finished text for every domain I work in, marketing, sales, support, code, rather than a transcription tool that just types what I said and leaves the cleanup to me. That is the bar I held every alternative to. Contextli is my own product and appears in this list, so weigh the bias, and the verdicts on the others stand on their own. Details are accurate as of mid-2026 and move fast, so check each official page before purchasing.


Sources

  1. Ruan et al., Stanford HCI / Baidu, “Speech Is 3x Faster than Typing for English and Mandarin Text Entry on Mobile Devices.” arxiv.org/abs/1608.07323
  2. Average typing speed (38 to 40 words per minute), medRxiv 2025. medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.05.11.25327386
  3. OpenAI Whisper accuracy and MLCommons MLPerf Inference v5.1 speech benchmark. github.com/openai/whisper ; mlcommons.org/2025/09/whisper-inferencev5-1/
  4. Gloria Mark et al., “The Cost of Interrupted Work”; Atlassian on context-switching cost. atlassian.com/work-management/project-management/context-switching
  5. Wispr Flow pricing and platforms. wisprflow.ai/pricing
  6. Wispr Flow ratings and privacy reporting: iOS App Store, Trustpilot, TechCrunch. trustpilot.com/review/wisprflow.ai ; techcrunch.com
  7. Superwhisper features, pricing, and Product Hunt award. superwhisper.com ; producthunt.com/products/superwhisper
  8. MacWhisper. goodsnooze.gumroad.com/l/macwhisper
  9. Willow Voice pricing and plans. willowvoice.com/pricing ; producthunt.com/products/willow-voice
  10. Aqua Voice. aquavoice.com ; producthunt.com/products/aqua
  11. Dragon (Nuance) professional speech recognition. dragon.nuance.com
  12. Otter.ai pricing. otter.ai/pricing
  13. Contextli pricing and product. contextli.com/pricing
  14. VoiceInk (open-source, on-device). tryvoiceink.com
  15. Typeless (cross-platform, Android). typeless.com
  16. Spokenly (bring-your-own-key, local models). spokenly.app

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