Is Narro worth it?

Is Narro worth it in 2026?

Yes if you love podcasts and save tons of articles. No if you want modern app design or human-quality narration.

The short answer

Narro is clever—it converts your saved articles into a private podcast RSS feed you can listen to in any podcast app. Worth it if you're podcast-native and batch-save articles for listening. Not worth it if you read casually, want sleep voices, or expect fast development and polished design.

What you actually get

  • ·Private podcast RSS feed of your saved articles
  • ·Works with any podcast player (Overcast, Apple Podcasts, Pocket Casts)
  • ·Email-forward articles directly to Narro
  • ·Browser bookmarklet and Chrome extension
  • ·Neural voices via Google Cloud and Amazon Polly
  • ·Multi-language support
  • ·Adjustable playback speed in your podcast app
  • ·Share generated audio clips
  • ·Auto-import from RSS feeds

The real costs

Monthly

~$9/mo Premium

Yearly

~$90/yr Premium

Fine print

Small indie team, slow feature releases. No native reading UI. Voice quality is dated.

Do the math

At $9/mo, you're paying for an RSS-to-podcast converter. If you listen to 10+ hours/month, it's worthwhile. Less than that, try free tier or read directly.

Who should subscribe

  • Podcast-native listeners who save tons of articles
  • People who want articles in their podcast feed without extra apps
  • Multi-source content consumers (blogs, news, newsletters)
  • Anyone willing to accept voice quality as a trade-off for convenience

Who shouldn't

  • ×Users who want to read AND listen with text visible
  • ×Sleep listeners (no ASMR voices, no sleep optimization)
  • ×People who expect rapid feature development
  • ×Anyone who prioritizes voice quality
  • ×Book readers (Narro is articles-only, doesn't handle EPUBs well)

Better fits for specific scenarios

IfYou want articles + books in one place

PickMorph — read and listen to any EPUB or article with ASMR sleep voices

IfYou want best voice quality

PickElevenLabs Reader or Matter

IfYou want a full podcast app with podcast transcripts

PickApple Podcasts or Overcast (use them natively, not via Narro conversion)

IfYou want to read AND listen with highlighting

PickReadwise Reader or Google Play Books

Common complaints

  • Small indie team—slow feature development
  • Voice quality feels dated compared to ElevenLabs/Speechify
  • Occasional parsing failures on paywalled or complex articles
  • Free tier is quite limited
  • Discovery and onboarding are rough
  • No native reading UI—audio-only experience
  • Doesn't handle books (EPUBs) well

Verdict

Clever product with a unique model—if your workflow is 'save articles, listen in podcast app,' it works. But Narro feels unmaintained (slow updates, dated voices) and the niche is small. Better alternative: use Morph for articles + books with better voices and sleep features, or add read-later articles to Readwise Reader which has higher-quality TTS.

Frequently asked

How is Narro different from just using a podcast app?+
It's a bridge—converts your article saves into podcast RSS you can listen to in any app without switching apps. Clever if you're podcast-obsessed, but adds a middleman.
Can I listen offline?+
Not directly—Narro generates audio on-demand. You'd need to download the MP3 from your podcast app.
Does it work with email newsletters?+
Yes—forward to Narro's email address and it adds to your queue.
Can I use Narro on the web or desktop?+
You manage Narro on the web, but listening happens in your podcast app. No native Narro player.
Is Narro ever updated?+
The team is small and releases are slow. Don't expect rapid feature development.
How does it compare to Morph?+
Morph is a full reader with books + articles + sleep voices. Narro is articles-only converted to podcasts. Pick Morph for reading/listening in one place; Narro for podcast-app freedom.

Your whole library, read to you.

Bring your EPUBs, save the articles you meant to read, and listen with Morph's own voices — offline, on your phone.