Filipino speech to text: Wisprs transcribes Filipino
Transcribe Filipino audio (Filipino) with Wisprs. Get clean transcripts, SRT subtitles, and AI summaries on free or paid tiers, with no language pack to install.

Built for teams that want transcripts to turn into reusable, searchable assets.
Filipino speech to text: Wisprs transcribes Filipino
Yes, Wisprs transcribes Filipino (Filipino) audio. Upload a recording and get back an editable transcript with speaker labels, timestamps, and export-ready subtitles, usually in a few minutes. Filipino is a mid-resource language for speech recognition, so accuracy is good on clear audio but benefits from a review pass, especially with heavy dialect or background noise. The free tier transcribes Filipino with no language pack to install; paid tiers add AI summaries, chapters, and DOCX, VTT, and JSON exports. Filipino is spoken across the Philippines, and Wisprs auto-detects it, so you never set the language manually.
How to transcribe Filipino audio
Wisprs runs Filipino through the same multilingual engine that powers 100+ languages: self-hosted -based models on the free tier and on paid plans. The workflow is the same for every recording:
- Upload a Filipino recording (MP3, WAV, M4A, MP4, and more).
- Wisprs auto-detects Filipino and transcribes it, with speaker labels on paid plans.
- Review and edit in the dashboard, then export text, subtitles, or DOCX.
You can start with the free ; no account is required for short files.
Why Filipino transcription is challenging
Filipino is written in the Latin alphabet and spoken across the Philippines. Filipino (based on Tagalog) is routinely mixed with English in everyday speech (Taglish). For automatic , the main difficulty is pervasive Tagalog-English code-switching (Taglish) within single sentences. Wisprs handles this by auto-detecting the language and, on paid plans, applying speaker separation so multi-speaker Filipino recordings stay readable. For background on the language itself, see the overview of .
What you can do with a Filipino transcript
Once you have a clean Filipino transcript, you can:
- Transcribe Filipino podcasts into show notes, summaries, and chapters.
- Turn creator content into searchable, repurposable text for blog posts and clips.
- Caption interviews with exported subtitles for video and accessibility.
Translate the transcript to English or any of 100+ languages for international audiences, or feed it into your publishing workflow. See the full for what each plan includes.
How accurate is Filipino speech to text?
Filipino is a mid-resource language for speech recognition, so accuracy is good on clear audio but benefits from a review pass, especially with heavy dialect or background noise. Accuracy always depends on audio quality: clear speech, minimal background noise, and one speaker at a time give the best results. For Filipino specifically, the thing to watch is pervasive Tagalog-English code-switching (Taglish) within single sentences. On paid plans, improves handling of longer and multi-speaker Filipino recordings. For anything published or high-stakes, plan a quick review pass in the editor.
Filipino export formats
Free Filipino transcripts export as TXT and . Paid plans add VTT, DOCX, and JSON, so Filipino subtitles drop straight into video timelines and structured transcripts feed into other tools. Compare what each tier includes on .
FAQ: Filipino speech to text
Can I transcribe Filipino for free?
Yes. The Wisprs free tier transcribes Filipino audio with no credit card and returns TXT and SRT files. Longer recordings and advanced exports like DOCX and VTT are on paid plans.
Does Wisprs handle Filipino dialects and accents?
Filipino (based on Tagalog) is routinely mixed with English in everyday speech (Taglish). Wisprs auto-detects the language so you do not set it manually, and paid plans use ElevenLabs Scribe for stronger handling of accents and multi-speaker audio. A short review pass in the editor cleans up the rest.
What Filipino audio formats can I upload?
Wisprs accepts MP3, WAV, M4A, MP4, OGG, WEBM, and other common formats, so you can upload Filipino recordings from most devices and platforms directly.
How do I add Filipino subtitles to a video?
Transcribe the audio, then export an or VTT file and load it into your video editor or platform. The subtitle timing comes from the transcript's timestamps.
Start transcribing Filipino audio
Upload a Filipino recording and see the transcript in minutes. Start with the free or to keep your Filipino transcripts, add speaker labels, and unlock summaries and exports. Review for Filipino transcription at scale.