Enhance Voice Quality with AI
Turn a thin, dull or distant voice recording into a polished, studio-style track. This premium tool both denoises and re-synthesises the voice for richer, clearer, broadcast-grade sound.
Pro Premium AI tool — included with any paid plan.
How it works
Resemble-Enhance runs two stages: a denoiser removes noise, then a generative enhancer restores bandwidth and presence, effectively "re-recording" the voice as if it were captured on a better mic in a better room.
What it's good for
- Upgrading laptop-mic recordings
- Podcast and voiceover polish
- Old or low-quality voice files
- Making any voice sound pro
Details
- Engine
- Resemble-Enhance
- Formats
- MP3, WAV, M4A, FLAC, OGG, AAC, MP4, MOV
- Price
- Paid plans
Frequently asked questions
Denoising only removes noise. Enhancement removes noise and then rebuilds the voice itself — adding clarity, body and presence the original mic never captured.
It aims to sound like a better recording of you, not a different person. Because it's generative, very degraded input can drift slightly; it shines on already-intelligible voices.
The generative enhancer is GPU-heavy and slower than the filter-based tools, so it runs on the paid tier with priority processing.
Voices that are already intelligible but thin, dull or distant transform the most. If the source is so degraded you can barely make out words, the generative stage has less to work from and can drift, so set expectations accordingly.
Because the second stage is generative, on very damaged or heavily clipped input it may invent breaths, sibilance or texture that wasn't there. For light-to-moderate sources the added presence sounds clean and natural.
No - the output is a re-synthesised version of your voice, not a reversible filter. Always keep the original file in case you prefer the untouched recording.
Not ideal - generative enhancement can introduce detail that confuses speech-to-text. For ASR use the transcription-grade cleanup tool instead; use this one for human listening.