Ask most people using Windows about voice control, and they'll picture the accessibility tool that reads commands aloud and moves a cursor around the screen. That's Voice Access, and it's genuinely powerful. But there's a second, lighter tool sitting one shortcut away that handles the thing most of us actually want, which is turning speech into text without any setup at all.
Windows ships two voice tools, and most people only meet the heavier one
The confusion starts with the fact that Windows 11 has two separate voice features that sound like they do the same job. They don't. One is built for dictation, the other for running your entire PC, and knowing which is which saves you a lot of wasted clicks.
Voice Typing is the one you reach for when you just need words on a screen. You press

Voice Access is the heavier tool. You launch it with

For me, Voice Typing is the one I use daily, because most of the time I don't want to pilot my PC by voice. I just want to get a paragraph down faster than I can type it, and that's exactly what it's good at.

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The auto-punctuation toggle is the setting nearly everyone walks past
Here's the catch that puts people off Voice Typing within the first minute: by default, "Automatic punctuation" is off, so you have to say "comma," "period," and "question mark" out loud. It works, but it breaks the rhythm of actually talking, and most people quit before they find the fix.
The fix is a single toggle. Open the Voice Typing toolbar with
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It isn't flawless. It reads your pauses well enough for ordinary sentences, but it'll occasionally drop a comma where you wanted one or end a sentence early, so you'll still want to glance over what it wrote. Even so, the difference is night and day. With auto-punctuation off, dictation feels like reciting code. With it on, it feels like talking, which is the whole point.
While you're in that settings panel, there's also a profanity filter you can turn off if you'd rather have everything you say transcribed verbatim instead of masked with asterisks.
Voice Typing lives in the cloud, while Voice Access stays on your machine
The biggest practical difference between the two isn't what they do, but where they do it. This matters more than it sounds, especially if you ever work offline.
Voice Typing sends your speech to Microsoft's servers for processing, so it requires an internet connection to work. The upside is accuracy and a wide language list. The downside is obvious: no connection, no dictation. If your Wi-Fi drops mid-sentence, so does the transcription.
Voice Access takes the opposite approach. It runs entirely on your device using on-device speech recognition, so it keeps working with no internet at all. That's a real advantage if you're on a flight, in a dead zone, or simply prefer that your voice never leaves your PC. It's also why Voice Access is the better pick for anyone who cares about keeping dictation private.
So the decision isn't only about dictation versus PC control. It's also online versus offline. I lean on Voice Typing at my desk because the connection is always there and the accuracy is excellent, but I'm glad Voice Access exists for the times when the network doesn't.
A recent setting quietly fixed the most annoying thing about both tools
Both tools used to share a frustration. They'd either act on your words too soon, cutting you off mid-thought, or feel sluggish if you naturally pause a lot when you speak. There was no way to tune it. Now there is.
Microsoft added a "Wait time before acting" setting to both Voice Typing and Voice Access across recent builds, so it isn't exclusive to one tool or to the very latest version of Windows. You'll find it in the same settings panel you reach through the gear icon on each tool's toolbar.

The options range from Instant at 0.1 seconds all the way to Very Long at 3.0 seconds, with the default sitting at Medium, which is half a second. The idea is simple. If you speak quickly and want commands to fire the moment you finish, drop the wait time down. If you pause a lot, take breaths between phrases, or just don't want the tool jumping the gun, push it higher.
It's a small slider, but it's the kind of thing that decides whether voice input feels natural or fights you. I nudged mine slightly longer than the default because I tend to think mid-sentence.
Voice Access can learn the words it keeps getting wrong
If you give Voice Access a real try, you'll run into the same wall every dictation tool eventually hits, which is proper nouns. Names, brands, technical jargon, anything it hasn't been trained on tends to come out mangled, and saying it louder doesn't help.
Voice Access has a built-in answer for this called Add to vocabulary. It lets you add your own words, including hard-to-pronounce ones, to the tool's dictionary so it stops guessing wrong. Adding a word creates a bias toward recognizing it, so the more context you give it, the more accurate your dictation gets over time.

You can add words through the settings menu on the Voice Access bar, or just say "Add to Vocabulary" out loud and feed it the term directly. It's worth doing for any name or piece of jargon you use constantly, because correcting the same word by hand fifteen times a day adds up fast. This one belongs to Voice Access, by the way, not Voice Typing, so it's another reason the heavier tool is worth keeping around for longer dictation sessions.
Which one you should actually open comes down to a single question
The whole choice boils down to one thing: do you need to put words in a box, or do you need to run the computer? For dictation, press




