Voice typing has been around for two decades. Most people still don't use it.
Wispr is the rare one. The AI voice app is in talks to raise new funds at a $2 billion price, per a Bloomberg report. That is close to triple what investors paid for the same firm just months ago.
The Numbers Behind The Round
Wispr's last round closed at $25 million. Notable Capital led it. That round set the value at $700 million.
Before that, Wispr raised $30 million in June 2025. The firm has now raised about $81 million in all.
A jump from $700 million to $2 billion in a few months would be one of the fastest moves of this AI cycle. Why? Investors aren't betting on a feature.
They're betting on a new habit. After three months, Wispr says its users type more than half of their words by voice instead of by keyboard.
Notable Capital is the firm that used to be called GGV Capital US. It also backed Slack and Airbnb in their early days. Flight Fund, the venture group run by podcaster Steven Bartlett, also took part in past rounds.
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Why 270 Fortune 500 Firms Already Use It
Wispr Flow runs as a desktop app. It listens, cleans up filler words, and then types out what you said.
The pitch to firms is simple. People talk faster than they type.
That sounds small, but it adds up. The usage data is the wild part.
Growth is at 40% per month, which is a pace that piles up fast. That kind of stickiness is what's drawing the new price.
Investors pay up for tools that change daily habits, not just dashboards no one logs into. That is the whole pitch in one line.
Wispr Flow now works on Mac, Windows, and Android. An iOS version is also live. The wider the app gets, the harder it is for rivals to catch up.
Worth Noting
The AI tools space has been hard to call. Lots of well-funded apps have flamed out, with free users trying them once and never coming back.
Wispr has the flip problem. The harder it is for investors to get a seat, the higher the price goes.
Voice startups have been pitched for years. Most never crossed from cool demo into daily use.
If Wispr's data holds up, it would be the first one that did. The bar is higher than for most AI tools, since the user has to change a habit they've had since grade school.
The next thing to watch is the close of this round. The $2 billion price is just a target right now, not a done deal.
A finished round at that level would mark a clear win for voice as a true input mode. It would also pull more cash into voice rivals.
What changes daily habits is worth a lot. Wispr just put a $2 billion number on it.
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