How to Listen to Gmail Emails
⢠By Elliott Tong
To listen to Gmail emails, install a text-to-speech Chrome extension like FlowRead, then open any email in your inbox. A play button appears in the email viewâclick it to start listening. FlowRead reads the email aloud while highlighting each word in real-time, so you can follow along visually while you listen.
Why Listen to Your Emails Instead of Reading Them?
The average professional receives over 120 emails per day. By late afternoon, reading through another wall of text feels exhaustingâyour eyes are tired, your focus is scattered, and emails start piling up in the "I'll read this later" folder that never gets opened.
Listening to emails solves this in a few ways:
You can multitask
Listen while doing repetitive tasks, organizing files, or handling routine work in the background. Emails that would sit unread get processed, saving dead time.
It reduces eye strain
After hours of screen time, your eyes need a break. Listening lets you keep working without adding more visual load.
It helps you actually finish
Long newsletters, detailed updates, and FYI threads are easy to skim and forget. Listening forces you to go through the whole thing.
It improves focus and retention
When you hear the words while seeing them highlighted, you engage both auditory and visual processing. This is called dual codingâresearch in cognitive psychology shows it improves comprehension compared to reading or listening alone.
Tips for Listening to Gmail Effectively
Start with Low-Stakes Emails
Don't start with an email you need to respond to immediately. Begin with newsletters, company updates, or informational emails where you just need to absorb the content. This lets you get comfortable with the listening experience before using it for more critical communication.
Match the Email Type to the Method
Text-to-speech works best for: newsletters and digests, long updates from colleagues, FYI emails you need to know but not act on, industry news and reports, email threads with lots of back-and-forth to catch up on. It's less ideal for: emails requiring immediate written response, emails with lots of links you need to click, highly technical content with code or data tables.
Build Up Your Speed Gradually
Most people can eventually listen at 1.5x to 3x speed, but it takes time. Your brain needs to learn to process speech at that rate. Start at 1x or 1.25x for the first week, then gradually increase. At 1.5x speed, a 5-minute email takes just over 3 minutes. At 2x, it takes 2.5 minutes. At 3x, it takes under 2 minutes. The time savings compound across dozens of emails.
Combine with Gmail's Keyboard Shortcuts
If you use Gmail's built-in keyboard shortcuts (press ? in Gmail to see them), you can create an efficient workflow: Press j or k to move between emails, press play to listen, press e to archive when done, move to the next email. This lets you process your inbox systematically without touching your mouse.
Use It When Your Eyes Are Tired
The best time for email TTS is often late afternoon or evening, when you've been staring at screens all day. Listening lets you stay productive without adding more eye strain.