Rev predates almost every AI transcription competitor by a decade or more, launching in 2010 as a two-sided marketplace connecting freelance transcriptionists with people who needed audio transcribed, long before automated speech recognition was accurate enough to compete. That marketplace, thousands of freelance transcriptionists and captioners, still operates alongside newer AI transcription the company added later.
That origin shapes how Rev is used today: customers can choose fully automated AI transcription for speed and low cost, or route a file to a human transcriptionist when accuracy has to hold up in legal, academic, or broadcast contexts where an AI transcript's occasional errors aren't acceptable. Captioning and subtitling for video follow the same either-AI-or-human choice.
There's no free tier; AI transcription starts around $15 a month, with human transcription priced per audio minute separately. For anyone who specifically wants the option of a real person doing the transcription when it matters, rather than an AI model with a human-review add-on bolted onto it, Rev's marketplace origins still show in how directly that choice is offered.







