Discover and submit apps built for voice first

The Voice-Native App Directory is a curated online directory dedicated exclusively to applications designed with voice as the primary user interface. Unlike apps that add voice support as a secondary feature, listed applications are evaluated to ensure voice interaction forms the core of their functionality — including voice commands, continuous conversational interfaces, real-time speech recognition, and voice-driven workflows. The directory serves developers, product founders, accessibility specialists, and voice technology researchers seeking rigorously vetted examples of voice-first design.
It functions as both a discovery platform and a community resource: users can browse by category, platform, or pricing model; upvote applications; and access direct links to each app’s official page. All listings undergo manual review to verify authentic voice-native implementation before inclusion.
The directory operates as a static, editorially maintained web resource. Applications are submitted by developers via a public form, then assessed by the directory team against defined voice-native criteria — such as reliance on speech input for core tasks, minimal requirement for touch or keyboard interaction, and integration of voice-specific UX patterns (e.g., turn-taking, error recovery via speech, natural language understanding). Approved listings include a brief descriptive summary, official domain link, platform compatibility, and pricing tier.
Users interact with the directory through a responsive website interface. They may browse categorized sections, use keyword search, sort by recency, or filter by platform and pricing. Featured applications are highlighted based on editorial judgment of innovation, usability, and representativeness of voice-native principles. No user accounts, analytics tracking, or personalized recommendations are implemented — the service remains focused on transparency and curation.
For developers, the directory provides benchmarking opportunities and inspiration for voice-first architecture decisions. Founders use it to identify market gaps and competitive positioning in voice-enabled software. Accessibility professionals reference it to locate tools supporting speech-based interaction for users with motor or visual impairments. Educators and researchers leverage it as a living catalog for studying voice interface patterns across domains — from health coaching and language learning to smart home control and podcast production. The directory also supports procurement teams evaluating voice-native solutions for enterprise deployment, offering consistent metadata and verified implementation details.