Translate English into Indonesian with natural pronunciation and downloadable MP3 audio. Free and unlimited.
Indonesian is the national language of the world’s fourth most populous country. Translate your English and hear clear, consistent pronunciation.
Text-to-speech reads your Indonesian translation with natural pronunciation. Indonesian is one of the easiest languages to pronounce, and the audio confirms it.
Download spoken Indonesian as permanent MP3 files for Bali trip preparation, Jakarta business or academic study.
Text in, translation out, everything erased. No storage, no tracking, no exceptions.
Indonesian has no conjugation, no gender and no tones. Translate your English and hear how refreshingly straightforward this language sounds.
Paste English and receive Indonesian with correct prefix and suffix morphology, the me-/ber-/di- system and natural word order.
Play the translation to hear the clear vowels, consistent consonants and rhythmic simplicity that make Indonesian one of the most phonetically accessible languages in the world.
Save spoken Indonesian for Bali and Jakarta travel, ASEAN business communication, academic research or personal language study.
Indonesia is the fourth most populous country on earth with over 270 million people, the largest economy in Southeast Asia, and a member of the G20. The Indonesian digital economy is one of the fastest growing in the world, with major e-commerce platforms, ride-hailing apps and digital payment systems operating primarily in Bahasa Indonesia. Businesses entering the Indonesian market need Indonesian-language content for e-commerce listings, social media marketing, customer service, regulatory compliance and partnership communications.
Bali alone attracts millions of international visitors annually, and Indonesia’s other destinations (Jakarta, Yogyakarta, Komodo, Raja Ampat, Lake Toba, Borneo) are growing rapidly. English-speaking travelers who learn basic Indonesian find that the language opens doors throughout the archipelago in ways that English alone cannot, particularly outside major tourist zones. Indonesian is also one of the easiest Asian languages for English speakers to learn: no tones, no gender, no conjugation, phonetically regular spelling and a Latin-based alphabet. The text-to-speech confirms this accessibility, letting you hear how clear and consistent Indonesian pronunciation actually is compared to the complexity of most Asian languages.
Indonesia is the fourth most populous country and the largest economy in Southeast Asia, with one of the fastest-growing digital markets in the world where Bahasa Indonesia dominates online content consumption.
Indonesian grammar is famously streamlined. There is no verb conjugation for person, number or tense. There are no articles, no grammatical gender, no case system and no tone distinctions. Tense is indicated by time words and context. Plurality is optionally marked by reduplication (rumah-rumah = houses). The prefix and suffix system (me-, ber-, di-, -kan, -i, -an) modifies verb and noun meanings in predictable ways, and understanding these affixes is the key to Indonesian vocabulary building.
The translator adds the appropriate affixes to produce natural Indonesian from English input. English tense markers are converted to Indonesian time expressions. English articles are dropped. English plural markers are converted to Indonesian reduplication where emphasis requires it. The prefix me- with its nasal assimilation rules (which change the initial consonant of the root) is applied correctly. The result reads as natural, properly formed Indonesian that follows standard Bahasa Indonesia conventions taught in schools and used in media across the archipelago.
Indonesian pronunciation is exceptionally regular and accessible for English speakers. Most letters are pronounced consistently, vowels are clear and simple (similar to Spanish or Italian), there are no tones, and consonant clusters are minimal. The language is sometimes described as the easiest Asian language for English speakers to pronounce. The few unfamiliar elements include the ng sound at the beginning of words (like ngomong for speak) and the precise distinction between e with a schwa-like pronunciation and e with a clear ay-like pronunciation.
The text-to-speech confirms this accessibility in natural connected speech. For English speakers used to struggling with Asian language pronunciation, hearing Indonesian is a revelation of clarity and consistency. Whether you are preparing for a Bali vacation, a Jakarta business meeting, an academic conference in Yogyakarta or a diving trip to Raja Ampat, the audio output shows you that Indonesian pronunciation is genuinely within reach after just a few listening sessions.
E-commerce businesses download Indonesian audio for product videos and customer service training. Tourism operators create Indonesian welcome messages and safety briefings for Bali, Lombok and other destinations. Students build pronunciation libraries for Indonesian language courses. NGOs and development organizations prepare community communication materials in Indonesian. Business travelers compile audio vocabulary for meetings with Indonesian partners across mining, palm oil, technology and manufacturing sectors.
Every file is free, permanent and unrestricted. No watermarks, no daily limits, no registration. Indonesia’s massive population and booming digital economy make English-to-Indonesian translation one of the most commercially significant language pairs in the Asia-Pacific region.
Standard written English produces clean Indonesian output. The affix system (me-/ber-/di-/-kan/-i/-an) is applied with correct nasal assimilation. English tense is conveyed through Indonesian time markers. Reduplication is used for emphasis or plurality where natural Indonesian convention requires it. Formal and informal registers are maintained through vocabulary selection. For long texts, translate paragraph by paragraph.
English passive voice is converted to Indonesian di- prefix passive. Complex English subordination is restructured to match Indonesian syntactic preferences. English compound sentences may be simplified to match the Indonesian preference for shorter, clearer sentence structures. The output reads as natural, well-formed Bahasa Indonesia suitable for digital marketing, business, tourism, academic and personal communication.
For legal contracts, mining concession documents, palm oil certification materials, pharmaceutical regulatory filings, certified translations, e-commerce platform localization, marketing campaigns targeting specific Indonesian demographics, literary translation or any material where accuracy carries regulatory or commercial consequences, work with a professional English-Indonesian translator.
This translator handles everyday communication, tourism content, business drafting, study materials and general reference with excellent results. A professional handles everything requiring legal certification, sector-specific expertise, cultural targeting or publication standards for the vast and diverse Indonesian market.
English enters, Indonesian returns, everything is permanently erased. No copies, no logs, no cookies. Every session receives identical complete privacy protection regardless of content or volume.
This is a permanent architectural guarantee. Your text passes through once and vanishes from our systems. E-commerce businesses, mining executives and casual travelers all receive the same absolute privacy commitment.
Indonesian is the national language of Indonesia, a country of more than 270 million people, and it works as a shared tongue across thousands of islands. People translate English to Indonesian for work, study, travel and family.
Indonesian uses the Latin alphabet and is often called one of the easier languages for English speakers to start with. Verbs do not change for tense, there is no grammatical gender, and a plural is often made by simply saying the word twice. Time and number come from context and small helper words rather than from endings.
| English | Indonesian | Say it |
|---|---|---|
| Hello | Halo | HAH-loh |
| Thank you | Terima kasih | tuh-REE-mah KAH-see |
| Please | Tolong | TOH-long |
| Yes / No | Ya / Tidak | yah / TEE-dah |
| Good morning | Selamat pagi | suh-LAH-mat PAH-gee |
| Goodbye | Selamat tinggal | suh-LAH-mat TING-gahl |
Indonesian keeps verbs in one form, so a plain present-tense sentence usually translates cleanly. The same root word grows new meanings through prefixes and suffixes, so a translation may add parts to a familiar word. Short, direct sentences work best.
Yes. This English to Indonesian translator is free with no limit on how many translations you make and no sign-up.
Yes. After the translation is read aloud, use the download button to save the Indonesian audio as an MP3 file you can keep.
No. You can translate English into Indonesian right away, with no registration, no login and no email.
No. Your text is processed, returned to your screen and then discarded. It is not saved, shared or used to build a profile.