Text to Speech MCP Server
<!-- mcp-name: io.github.Engr-FaizanAli/text-to-speech -->
Text to Speech is an open-source Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that lets AI assistants read text aloud on the user's computer. On Windows it uses the built-in Speech API (SAPI) by default, so no API key, account, subscription, or cloud text-to-speech service is required.
The server exposes one model-controlled tool:
speak_text(text: string)
Use it for user-provided text, assistant answers, accessibility workflows, or spoken progress updates while an agent works.
Features
- Local playback through Windows SAPI by default.
- No cloud API and no API key for the default setup.
- FIFO playback: concurrent requests are spoken one at a time, in order.
- Blocking tool completion: each call returns after its audio finishes.
- Bounded input and queue sizes to prevent unbounded resource use.
- Temporary generated WAV files are removed after playback by default.
- Standard MCP
stdiotransport through the official Python SDK. - Optional Piper, Transformers MMS, and local HTTP backends for advanced users.
The MCP server source is open source under the MIT License. Windows SAPI is a proprietary component included with Windows; it is not an open-source speech engine.
Requirements
- Windows 10 or Windows 11 for the zero-configuration SAPI backend.
- Python 3.10 or newer.
- An MCP client such as Codex, Claude Desktop, or another compatible client.
uv/uvxis recommended for package-based MCP installation.
Install
After the package is published to PyPI, configure an MCP client to run:
uvx text-to-speech-mcp
For Codex, add this to ~/.codex/config.toml:
[mcp_servers.text_to_speech]
command = "uvx"
args = ["text-to-speech-mcp"]
startup_timeout_sec = 30
tool_timeout_sec = 300
enabled = true
Restart the MCP client after changing its configuration.
Install from source
git clone https://github.com/engr-faizanali/text-to-speech-mcp.git
cd text-to-speech-mcp
python -m pip install -e .
Then configure the client to run text-to-speech-mcp directly.
Prompt Examples
Read arbitrary text:
Use the Text to Speech tool to read aloud: The deployment completed successfully.
Read the final answer:
Use the Text to Speech tool to read your final response aloud before displaying it.
Read visible intermediate progress updates in order:
Use the text_to_speech MCP server's speak_text tool for spoken progress updates.
For every meaningful intermediate update that you display to me:
1. Write a concise, natural-language version of the update.
2. Call speak_text with that text.
3. Wait for the call to finish before producing or speaking the next update.
4. Then display the same update in text.
Also read the final answer aloud before displaying it. Never narrate hidden
reasoning, chain-of-thought, secrets, credentials, raw tool output, terminal
logs, or source code. Do not invoke speech calls in parallel. If the tool is
unavailable, continue normally in text and report the failure once.
The text_to_speech portion is the client-side server name from the Codex configuration. Other clients may display a different namespace while keeping the tool name speak_text.
Tool Contract
| Field | Value | | --- | --- | | Tool name | speak_text | | Input | text, required string, 1-10,000 characters | | Result | Completion message after local playback finishes | | Ordering | FIFO, one active playback at a time | | Queue limit | 32 pending requests | | Network use with SAPI | None |
The tool is model-controlled under MCP. The user decides when to ask the model to call it, and the MCP client may show or require approval for tool calls.
Privacy
With the default SAPI backend, text is passed from the MCP client to a local Python process and then to Windows speech components. It is not sent to this project, an external API, or a cloud TTS provider. Generated WAV files are written under %TEMP%\text-to-speech-mcp and deleted after playback unless TEXT_TO_SPEECH_KEEP_AUDIO=true is set.
Do not ask an AI assistant to speak secrets, credentials, private keys, hidden reasoning, or sensitive tool output.
Optional Backends
The default requires no configuration:
TEXT_TO_SPEECH_BACKEND = "sapi"
Advanced users can set TEXT_TO_SPEECH_BACKEND to piper, transformers_mms, or http. These options require their own local model, binary, Python dependencies, or endpoint. See PACKAGE_MCP.md.
Legacy CODEX_TTS_BACKEND and CODEX_TTS_FALLBACK_BACKEND environment variables remain supported for compatibility.
Development
python -m pip install -e ".[dev]"
python -m unittest discover -s tests -v
python scripts/validate_release.py --online
python -m build
python -m twine check dist/*
See MCP_PUBLIC_RELEASE.md for the full release process.
Standards
- MCP transport:
stdio - MCP tool implementation: official Python MCP SDK
- Registry metadata:
server.jsonusing the 2025-12-11 schema - Package registry: PyPI
- Registry ownership marker: this README's
mcp-namecomment - Registry namespace:
io.github.Engr-FaizanAli/text-to-speech
Official references:
- MCP tools specification
- MCP Registry publishing quickstart
- MCP Registry package types
- MCP Registry repository
License
MIT. See LICENSE.






