TTS ADHD Accessibility Reimagined in Speech Central for iOS and Android

Speech Central has made substantial progress in recent weeks by deeply enhancing its ADHD mode, reinforcing its position as one of the most advanced text-to-speech solutions for users with ADHD. These improvements are not cosmetic tweaks; they represent a broad, system-wide rethinking of how an app should behave when attention support is essential.

ADHD and Dyslexia Profiles Now Available on Android

For the first time, ADHD and dyslexia accessibility profiles are now fully available on Android. This means users with ADHD or dyslexia can experience Speech Central as a first-class accessibility tool not only on iOS and macOS, but equally on Android. Feature parity across platforms is a critical step for accessibility, and this expansion ensures that attention support is no longer limited by operating system choice.

Exploring New ADHD-Focused Features Across Platforms

The work on Android has opened the door to new explorations in ADHD-focused usability. Some of these improvements rely on platform-level customization options that are currently unique to Android, and those features will remain Android-specific for now. However, the majority of these innovations have already been adapted and brought back to iOS, where they continue to evolve.

Importantly, this is not a one-time update. ADHD accessibility in Speech Central is treated as an ongoing research and development effort. Some changes are still rolling out, while others are planned for future releases as the app continues to refine how it supports focus, comprehension, and reduced cognitive load.

A Transformative ADHD Mode Experience

Enabling ADHD mode in Speech Central—available in the Tools section under “Attention Support”—now feels like switching to an entirely different application. This is intentional. ADHD mode is not based on one or two surface-level adjustments, but on nearly a hundred carefully coordinated changes distributed throughout the entire app.

Attention to Detail That Supports Focus

A simple example illustrates how deep these changes go. With the latest updates, when ADHD mode is enabled, the progress indicator advances after each paragraph rather than after every sentence. This small but meaningful adjustment reduces distraction and cognitive interruption, helping users maintain flow while listening.

Details like this highlight how seriously Speech Central takes ADHD accessibility. The goal is not merely to add an “ADHD mode” label, but to rethink text-to-speech behavior in a way that genuinely supports users with attention differences—often going further than any other text-to-speech app available today.

Get Speech Central on Your Platform