Translate English to Japanese live
Open your English stream, lecture, or service to a Japanese audience that prefers listening in Japanese — without scripting, dubbing, or producing a separate Japanese show.
Who listens on this language pair
Japan's streaming and creator ecosystems are mature, lucrative, and largely language-locked: Japanese audiences predominantly consume Japanese-language content. An English speaker offering a Japanese audio track unlocks demand that's otherwise served only by Japanese creators.
Where creators use it
Used by English creators adjacent to the VTuber economy, anime and manga commentary channels, English-as-a-foreign-language tutors with Japanese students (a vast market), and corporate AMA hosts presenting at events with Japanese audience tracks.
Example phrase
Thank you all for joining today's session.
皆さん、本日のセッションにご参加いただきありがとうございます。
How to run a English-to-Japanese session
- Start a Loquira session before you go live. Open Loquira on a phone or tablet a couple of minutes before your stream, meeting, or class starts. Make sure the microphone picks up your English clearly.
- Pick Japanese as the listener language. Japanese-speaking listeners select 日本語 from the language menu when they join your session. They hear translated audio in real time — no app install, no account.
- Share the join link with your audience. Drop the Loquira join link in the calendar invite, stream description, or chat at the start. A short code and QR work for in-person rooms.
- Speak English as you normally would. Loquira reads your English voice and produces Japanese audio on the listener's device. Pause briefly between speakers and over-enunciate brand names for cleanest output.
- End the Loquira session when you're done. End the session when the call or stream wraps. The transcript and a per-language audio replay remain available to attendees through the join link.
Cultural notes for this pair
Japanese register matters. Loquira's default voice uses polite speech (丁寧語/teineigo), which is appropriate for business, education, and most streaming contexts. Casual streams may feel slightly formal — this is acceptable to Japanese listeners but worth flagging.
Get started
Loquira's free tier covers a one-hour session with up to 25 listeners and up to five language tracks — enough to test a English-to-Japanese stream end to end before committing to a plan. See pricing for plan limits, and the audio requirements guide for the signal-quality details that matter most for this pair.