
Wispr Flow, a voice-based AI dictation app, has raised $30 million in Series A funding. The round was led by Menlo Ventures and included New Enterprise Associates (NEA), 8VC, and notable angels like Pinterest co-founder Evan Sharp. Wispr Flow was built by Tanay Kothari, who first explored hardware for silent speech input before pivoting to software. The company launched its Mac app in late 2024, followed by Windows and iOS versions.
More than half of Wispr Flow’s users dictate in non-English languages, highlighting its global relevance. The funds will help the company expand to Android, enhance enterprise features, and develop into a task-focused AI assistant. With voice AI gaining traction globally, investors are betting big on tools that offer real utility and wide language reach. Menlo Ventures partner Naomi Pilosof Ionita called Wispr “a clear leader” in reshaping voice-first productivity for modern workforces.
Voice AI That Understands You In 104 Languages
Wispr Flow is not your average voice dictation app. It supports 104 languages and helps users convert speech into action across notes, emails, and reminders. The product began with silent speech hardware but moved quickly to software after testing broader user needs. Its multilingual engine is key to its growth.
About 60% of dictations happen in non-English languages, with strong demand from Europe and Asia. “Every tier one venture fund in the Valley uses it,” said founder Tanay Kothari. Users say the software reduces manual typing and captures context better than other voice tools. The system also learns user habits to predict tasks and save time.
Wispr Flow launched its iOS app recently, and an Android version is now in development. For teams working across borders, the app offers a practical solution to speed up documentation. By blending natural language and real productivity, Wispr Flow appeals to professionals drowning in daily admin work.
From Investor Tool to Global Product
Wispr Flow’s breakout success began when venture capitalists started using it. That user-led interest helped spark its $30 million round. Carta CEO Henry Ward and Pinterest’s Evan Sharp joined the raise after seeing its value first-hand. This “VC-as-user” pattern is shaping the new wave of AI funding. Instead of just market sizing, investors want to experience usefulness directly.
For productivity apps like Wispr Flow, that means solving real pain points, like long emails or forgotten meeting notes. The tool is especially helpful in multilingual offices. Its 40% U.S., 30% European, and 30% rest-of-world user base shows its wide appeal. Spanish, French, Hindi, Mandarin, and German are the top non-English languages used.
Wispr aims to expand further with new enterprise tools and automation features. Yet challenges remain. Maintaining quality across languages and accents is tough. Real-time performance also needs constant tuning as speech habits vary globally. Still, Wispr Flow is growing fast, thanks to early champions who use what they fund.
Voice Tech Finds Its Next Chapter in AI and Global Reach
Wispr Flow signals a broader shift in how voice AI is evolving. Unlike older assistants stuck on basic commands, today’s tools understand context, language, and work tasks. By backing multilingual use, Wispr moves beyond Silicon Valley to serve global teams.
Its fast uptake among investors and users shows a rising demand for AI globally that adapts to how people speak and work. As Wispr Flow builds toward becoming a full task manager, it will face new tests in accuracy, adoption, and reliability. But with strong backing and real-world traction, it has a head start in the race to redefine voice-first software.