Voiceover
Voiceover is spoken audio recorded to sit over video, animation, slides, ads, tutorials, explainers, or other media without the speaker appearing on screen as the main visible performer. It is used to guide, explain, narrate, instruct, sell, or add context, and it is treated as a distinct audio layer in the edit and delivery workflow.
Quick facts:
Also called: VO – voice-over – narration – spoken commentary
Applies to: ads, explainers, courses, podcasts with video, social video, demos, training content
Used for: instruction, storytelling, commentary, brand messaging, accessibility support
Not the same as: on-camera dialogue, lip-synced dialogue, or background music.
Example:
A business publishes a short product demo with screen captures, captions, music, and a clean voiceover that explains what the viewer is seeing. The voice track is recorded separately, mixed against the music bed, and exported as part of the final video deliverable.
Gotchas:
- Voiceover is a format layer, not a music license – adding spoken narration does not clear the music underneath it.
- Delivery matters – bad gain staging, room noise, clipping, or poor music ducking can make a professional edit unusable.
- Script timing matters – a strong voiceover has to fit the actual cut, pacing, and screen action rather than read like a standalone article.
- Rights can still matter – paid voiceover work, union talent, or client usage terms may affect how the recording can be reused across campaigns, edits, or platforms.
FAQs
Related terms
Narration • Audio Editor • Background Music • Dialogue • Explainer Video • Sync License • Rights-Cleared Audio • Commercial Use

