7.3 KiB

title description ha_category ha_release ha_codeowners ha_domain ha_quality_scale ha_platforms ha_integration_type related
Text-to-speech (TTS) Instructions on how to set up text-to-speech (TTS) with Home Assistant.
Media source
Text-to-speech
0.35
@home-assistant/core
tts internal
notify
entity
url title
https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/#text-to-speech List of integrations using the TTS integration
url title
https://www.nabucasa.com/config/tts/ TTS with Home Assistant Cloud
url title
https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/google_translate/ Google Translate TTS
url title
https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/microsoft/ Microsoft TTS
url title
https://www.home-assistant.io/voice_control/ Home Assistant Assist

Text-to-speech (TTS) enables Home Assistant to speak to you.

{% include integrations/building_block_integration.md %}

See all TTS integrations using this building block for ways to use it in your automations. If you are using the Home Assistant voice assistant, Assist, Assist is using TTS when replying to you. Another way to use TTS is by using TTS with Home Assistant Cloud.

The state of a text-to-speech entity

The state of a text-to-speech {% term entity %} is a timestamp showing the date and time when text-to-speech was last used.

Screenshot showing the state of a text-to-speech entity in the developer tools Screenshot showing the state of a text-to-speech entity in the developer tools.

Actions

Action speak

Modern platforms will create entities under the tts domain, where each entity represents one text-to-speech service provider. These entities may be used as targets for the tts.speak action.

the tts.speak action supports language and on some platforms also options for settings, e.g., voice, motion, speed, etc. The text that should be spoken is set with message, and the media player that should output the sound is selected with media_player_entity_id.

action: tts.speak
target:
  entity_id: tts.example
data:
  media_player_entity_id: media_player.kitchen
  message: "May the force be with you."

Action say (legacy)

The say action supports language and on some platforms also options for settings, e.g., voice, motion, speed, etc. The text that should be spoken is set with message. Since release 0.92, action name can be defined in configuration service_name option.

Say to all media_player entities:

# Replace google_translate_say with <platform>_say when you use a different platform.
action: tts.google_translate_say
data:
  entity_id: all
  message: "May the force be with you."

Say to the media_player.floor entity:

action: tts.google_translate_say
data:
  entity_id: media_player.floor
  message: "May the force be with you."

Say to the media_player.floor entity in French:

action: tts.google_translate_say
data:
  entity_id: media_player.floor
  message: "Que la force soit avec toi."
  language: "fr"

With a template:

{% raw %}

action: tts.google_translate_say
data:
  message: "Temperature is {{states('sensor.temperature')}}."
  cache: false

{% endraw %}

Cache

The integration cache can be controlled with the cache option in the action to speak or say. A long time cache will be located on the file system. The in-memory cache for fast responses to media players will be auto-cleaned after a short period.

REST API

POST /api/tts_get_url

Returns a URL to the generated TTS file. The engine_id or platform parameter together with message are required.

{
  "engine_id": "tts.amazon_polly",
  "message": "I am speaking now"
}

The return code is 200 if the file is generated. The message body will contain a JSON object with the URL.

{
  "path": "/api/tts_proxy/265944c108cbb00b2a621be5930513e03a0bb2cd_en_-_tts.demo.mp3",
  "url": "http://127.0.0.1:8123/api/tts_proxy/265944c108cbb00b2a621be5930513e03a0bb2cd_en_-_tts.demo.mp3"
}

Sample curl command:

$ curl -X POST -H "Authorization: Bearer <ACCESS TOKEN>" \
       -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
       -d '{"message": "I am speaking now", "engine_id": "amazon_polly"}' \
       http://localhost:8123/api/tts_get_url

Troubleshooting

{% important %} Playing TTS media will prioritize the local Home Assistant URL, which can be configured by navigating to {% my network title="Settings > System > Network" %}. It is highly recommended to set the local Home Assistant URL to automatic, in which case the generated URL will be http://<local_ip>:<local_port>. {% endimportant %}

The following sections describe some of the problems encountered with media devices.

Self-signed certificates

This problem occurs when your Home Assistant instance is configured to be accessed through SSL, and you are using a self-signed certificate on your internal URL.

The tts action will send an https:// URL to the media device, which will check the certificate, and reject it. So it won't play your file. If you could make the device accept your certificate, it would play the file. However, many media devices do not allow changing settings to accept self-signed certificates. Ultimately, your option may be to serve files to local devices as http:// rather than https://.

Google cast devices

Google cast devices (Google Home, Chromecast, etc.) require the host in media URLs to be resolvable using Google's public DNS servers, and if the URL is specifying the https protocol, the certificate must be valid and not self-signed.

These requirements present the following problems, all of which create problems if the local Home Assistant URL is not http://<local_ip>:<local_port>:

  • They reject self-signed certificates.

  • They use Google's public DNS servers to resolve names, not DNS servers provided via DHCP. Additionally, they do not resolve local names through mDNS. This means they do not work with URLs that contain hostnames established by local naming means. Let's say your Home Assistant instance is running on a machine made known locally as ha (via local DNS) and homeassistant.local (via mDNS). All machines on your local network can access it as ha or homeassistant.local. However, try as you may, your cast device won't download the media files from your ha machine. That's because your cast device ignores your local naming setup. In this example, the say action creates a URL like http://ha/path/to/media.mp3 (or https://... if you are using SSL). If you are not using SSL, then setting an internal URL that contains the IP address of your server works around this issue. By using an IP address, the cast device does not have to resolve the hostname.

  • If you are using SSL (e.g., https://yourhost.example.org/...) then you must use the hostname in the certificate (e.g., external_url: https://yourhost.example.org). You cannot use an IP address since the certificate won't be valid for the IP address, and the cast device will refuse the connection.

The recommended way to overcome these obstacles is to not manually configure a local Home Assistant URL.