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Best Push-to-Talk Apps for Mac (2026 Comparison)

The best push-to-talk app on Mac is the one whose trigger you can reach without breaking your flow. Every voice typing tool — from the built-in macOS Dictation to AI apps like Wispr Flow and superwhisper — starts the same way: you press or hold a hotkey, speak, and the text appears. This guide compares the main options by how they trigger, what they cost, and how private they are — then shows how to put that trigger on a mouse side button so your hand never leaves the mouse.

What makes a good push-to-talk app on Mac

  • Trigger style. Hold-to-talk (record only while held, stop on release) feels the most natural for short bursts; toggle (press to start, press to stop) is fine for longer dictation.
  • A reachable hotkey. Most apps let you bind the trigger to the Globe (Fn) key or a custom shortcut. The easier it is to reach, the more you'll actually use it.
  • Accuracy and formatting. Built-in Dictation is fast and free; AI tools add punctuation, cleanup, and custom vocabulary.
  • Privacy. On-device transcription keeps audio on your Mac; cloud tools send it to a server.
  • Price model. Free, subscription, or one-time — pick what matches how often you dictate.

The best push-to-talk apps for Mac

1. macOS Dictation — free, built-in

Apple's built-in dictation is triggered by the Globe (Fn) key and needs no install. It's toggle-based by default and good enough for quick notes and replies. No AI cleanup, but it's free and on-device. See Trigger macOS Dictation with a Mouse Button for the exact setup.

2. Wispr Flow — AI dictation, hold-to-talk

A polished hold-to-talk AI app: hold the hotkey, speak, release, and you get clean, formatted text with punctuation. It's cloud-based (audio leaves your Mac) and runs on a free Basic tier plus a paid subscription. Best if you want the most hands-off formatting and don't mind the cloud.

3. superwhisper — privacy-first, on-device

Runs Whisper models on-device, so audio never leaves your Mac. Hold-to-talk with deep customization (modes, model choice, custom words). Offered as a subscription or a one-time lifetime license. The strongest pick when privacy matters.

4. MacWhisper — one-time purchase, local

A local Whisper transcription app with a dictation mode you can bind to a shortcut — including holding the Globe key to push-to-talk anywhere. A one-time purchase with no subscription. Leans more toward file transcription, but the dictation hotkey works system-wide.

5. Talon Voice — full hands-free control

Far beyond dictation: full voice-driven navigation, scripting, and coding. The gold standard for accessibility and RSI users. Overkill if you only want push-to-talk, but unmatched for hands-free computing. Free, with optional paid beta perks.

Also worth a look: Aiko (free, on-device) for occasional use, and BetterDictation / Sotto for one-time-purchase push-to-talk.

Comparison at a glance

AppTranscriptionTrigger stylePrivacyPrice model
macOS DictationApple (on-device)Toggle (Globe)On-deviceFree, built-in
Wispr FlowCloud AIHold-to-talkCloudFree tier + subscription
superwhisperWhisper (on-device)Hold-to-talkOn-deviceSubscription or lifetime
MacWhisperWhisper (on-device)Shortcut / Globe holdOn-deviceOne-time purchase
Talon VoiceVoice control engineContinuous / commandsOn-deviceFree (paid perks)

Put the trigger on a mouse button

Whichever app you choose, the trigger is still a key you have to reach. LinguaX lets a mouse side button be that trigger, so push-to-talk is one thumb press away:

  • Hold-to-talk via the Globe key — for macOS Dictation, MacWhisper, or any app that uses the Globe (Fn) key: set a side button to LinguaX's Modifier Hold gesture with the modifier set to Fn. Hold the button to hold Globe, release to stop. This is genuine hold-to-talk from the mouse.
  • Toggle via a shortcut — for apps whose start/stop is a single keypress: map the side button to that app's keyboard shortcut, so one click toggles recording.

One caveat to be honest about: LinguaX's hold gesture only injects the Globe (Fn) key. AI apps like Wispr Flow and superwhisper use their own hotkeys, so true hold-to-talk from the mouse works with them only if the app lets you set its trigger to Globe; otherwise use the toggle-via-shortcut route.

Either way, your hand stays on the mouse. Full walkthrough in the Push-to-Talk Voice Typing pillar guide and Map Mouse Side Buttons on macOS.

Common mistakes

  • Picking a toggle app when you want hold-to-talk. If you dictate in short bursts, choose a hold-to-talk app (or use Modifier Hold) so recording stops the moment you release.
  • Binding the trigger to an awkward key. The whole point of push-to-talk is a reachable trigger — a side button beats a far-off function key.
  • Ignoring privacy. If your dictation includes sensitive text, prefer an on-device app (macOS Dictation, superwhisper, MacWhisper).

FAQ

What is the best free push-to-talk app for Mac? The built-in macOS Dictation is the best free option and works system-wide via the Globe key. For free on-device AI transcription, Aiko is a common pick.

Which push-to-talk app is most private? On-device apps like superwhisper, MacWhisper, and macOS Dictation keep audio on your Mac. Cloud apps like Wispr Flow send audio to a server.

Can I push-to-talk with a mouse button on Mac? Yes. LinguaX maps a mouse side button to hold the Globe (Fn) key (Modifier Hold) or to any keyboard shortcut, turning the button into a push-to-talk trigger for macOS Dictation and hold-to-talk voice apps.

Hold-to-talk vs toggle — which is better? Hold-to-talk is better for short, frequent dictation because recording stops on release. Toggle is more comfortable for long passages where you don't want to keep a button held.

Get Started

LinguaX is a free download with a 30-day trial — no account, no telemetry. If it fits your workflow, it is a $9.9 one-time Lifetime purchase covering 3 devices, no subscription.

Download LinguaX and put push-to-talk on your mouse free for 30 days.