ElevenLabs Emotion Tags: Add Real Feeling to AI Voiceovers | DivinеWorks
ElevenLabs emotion tags voice acting guide

How to Add Emotion to ElevenLabs Voiceovers Using Action Verb Tags

Most people who use ElevenLabs generate a voiceover, hear it sound slightly flat, and assume that is just how AI voices work. In reality, ElevenLabs has a built-in emotion tag system that most creators never discover — a set of action verb prompts and delivery tags that tell the AI exactly how to perform each line. Furthermore, these tags work across all voice styles and require no technical knowledge to use. This guide covers every emotion category, what each tag does, and how to write prompts that produce genuinely expressive voiceovers.

What you will learn: ElevenLabs uses a four-tag system — Delivery, Tone, Texture, and Subtext — paired with an action verb intention to shape how a voice performs. There are five emotional categories: asserting, persuading, revealing, investigating, and protecting. Each category contains ten action verbs with corresponding tags you can drop directly into your script prompt.

5
Emotional intention categories covered in this guide
50
Action verbs — each with four ready-to-use delivery tags
200+
Total emotion tags available across all five categories

How ElevenLabs Emotion Tags Work

ElevenLabs processes natural language prompts inside square brackets placed before or within your script text. Each tag is a descriptor that signals a specific vocal quality to the AI — for example, [warmly] or [commanding]. When you combine multiple tags from different dimensions — delivery, tone, texture, and subtext — the voice output becomes layered and far more human.

The tag system in this guide organises emotion into a framework of intentions. Before writing a tag, you first decide what the speaker is trying to do to the listener — command them, persuade them, confess to them, question them, or protect them. Once the intention is clear, the action verb and its four tags follow naturally.

How to use the tags: Place them directly before the sentence they should affect, inside square brackets. You can use one tag or stack multiple tags together. For example: [authoritatively] [stern] You need to listen carefully. Or combine them: [whispering] [intimate] [hushed] I have to tell you something.

The Four Tag Dimensions

Tag SlotWhat It ControlsExample
Tag A — DeliveryHow the line is physically performed — pace, projection, rhythm[authoritatively]
Tag B — ToneThe emotional colour of the voice — warm, cold, urgent, playful[stern]
Tag C — TextureThe physical quality of the voice — smooth, cracked, booming, hushed[booming]
Tag D — SubtextThe hidden emotional layer beneath the words — what the speaker really means[unyielding]

Category 1 — To Assert or Overpower

🔴

Assert or Overpower

Use when the speaker needs authority, control, or dominance over the listener

This category covers situations where the speaker takes charge — whether commanding, warning, intimidating, or dismissing. These tags work well for product launch announcements, urgent calls to action, villain characters, or any moment where the voice needs to carry real weight and authority.

Action VerbIntentDelivery [A]Tone [B]Texture [C]Subtext [D]
CommandTake absolute authority[authoritatively][stern][booming][unyielding]
BelittleMake the listener feel small[condescending][coldly][sneering][unimpressed]
ChallengeDare the listener to respond[defiantly][aggressive][harsh][bold]
DismissTreat the listener as insignificant[flatly][bored][dry][indifferent]
DrillRepeat with mechanical intensity[sharply][monotone][clipped][robotic]
HumiliateStrip away the listener’s dignity[harshly][cruel][vicious][mocking]
IntimidateFill the listener with fear[growling][threatening][low-pitched][ominous]
MockRidicule or make fun of[scoffing][sarcastic][nasal][derisive]
PatronizeApparent kindness hiding superiority[smugly][arrogant][smooth][insincere]
WarnAlert to danger or consequences[grimly][urgent][heavy][foreboding]
Example prompt — using Warn

“[grimly] [urgent] [heavy] If you skip this step, the entire project will fall apart.”

[grimly] [urgent] [heavy]

Category 2 — To Persuade or Seduce

🟢

Persuade or Seduce

Use when the speaker needs to attract, charm, encourage, or win the listener over

This category is ideal for sales content, product descriptions, romantic scenes, coaching scripts, and any moment where the voice should pull the listener in rather than push them. The tags in this group range from gentle and warm to playful and alluring.

Action VerbIntentDelivery [A]Tone [B]Texture [C]Subtext [D]
BeguileCharm or enchant, sometimes deceptively[enchanting][playful][silky][mesmerizing]
CajolePersuade through flattery or coaxing[softly][sweetly][coaxing][persuasive]
EnticeAttract by offering reward[breathlessly][alluring][velvet][suggestive]
HypnotizeCapture the listener’s full attention[slowly][trance][rhythmic][dreamy]
LurePull the listener toward something[invitingly][sultry][hushed][tempting]
PleadMake an emotional appeal[desperately][tearful][cracked][begging]
SootheGently calm the listener[warmly][calm][gentle][pacifying]
TemptIncite a desire for something[teasingly][mischievous][purring][playful]
UrgeEncourage with earnestness[insistently][excited][breathless][pressing]
WooSeek the affection or favour of[tenderly][romantic][loving][adoring]
Example prompt — using Soothe (great for meditation or onboarding audio)

“[warmly] [calm] [gentle] You are exactly where you need to be. Take a breath and let this sink in.”

[warmly] [calm] [gentle]

Category 3 — To Reveal or Confess

🟡

Reveal or Confess

Use when the speaker shares something personal, vulnerable, or previously hidden

This category covers moments of emotional disclosure — sharing a secret, releasing tension, expressing frustration, or giving information with weight behind it. These tags are particularly useful for storytelling, personal brand content, podcast intros, and confessional-style scripts where the voice should feel genuinely human and exposed.

Action VerbIntentDelivery [A]Tone [B]Texture [C]Subtext [D]
AdmitAcknowledge a truth reluctantly[hesitantly][guilty][mumbled][reluctant]
BareUncover or reveal a secret[vulnerably][raw][shaking][exposed]
ConfideTell someone a secret in trust[whispering][intimate][hushed][secretive]
ExposeMake something visible by uncovering it[decisively][honest][clear][revealing]
GushSpeak with exaggerated enthusiasm[enthusiastic][overjoyed][bright][bubbling]
ImpartCommunicate information with intent[seriously][informative][steady][wise]
RelinquishGive up or hand over[sighs][defeated][weak][resigned]
SurrenderStop resisting[quietly][broken][soft][yielding]
UnburdenRelease oneself from a worry or secret[relieved][emotional][exhale][freeing]
VentRelease strong emotions[frustrated][angry][strained][explosive]
Example prompt — using Confide (ideal for personal brand or storytelling intros)

“[whispering] [intimate] [hushed] I almost gave up on this before it ever worked. Here is what actually changed things.”

[whispering] [intimate] [hushed]

Category 4 — To Investigate or Provoke

🔍

Investigate or Provoke

Use when the speaker questions, pressures, needles, or challenges the listener’s position

This category is built for tension — scripts involving doubt, suspicion, cross-examination, or deliberate provocation. These tags are highly effective for debate content, thriller narration, investigative journalism style voiceovers, or any scenario where the speaker wants to put the listener on the back foot.

Action VerbIntentDelivery [A]Tone [B]Texture [C]Subtext [D]
BaitDeliberately annoy or taunt[tauntingly][cunning][sharp][playful]
CheckVerify or stop someone’s progress[skeptically][analytical][flat][doubting]
Cross-examineQuestion closely or aggressively[accusingly][intense][probing][relentless]
GoadProvoke into action[provocative][irritated][poking][stinging]
NeedleAnnoy through persistent teasing[pestering][annoying][nagging][persistent]
PesterTrouble with frequent interruptions[impatiently][repetitive][whiny][demanding]
ProbeExplore verbally or with intent[curiously][prying][calculated][searching]
ProdStimulate into action[stubbornly][pushy][firm][insistent]
ScrutinizeExamine very thoroughly[narrowly][suspicious][slow][judging]
TestTry the quality or strength of[judging][cold][clinical][evaluating]
Example prompt — using Probe (great for documentary or investigative narration)

“[curiously] [calculated] [searching] So who exactly made that decision — and when did they know what it would cost?”

[curiously] [prying] [calculated]

Category 5 — To Protect or Defend

🛡️

Protect or Defend

Use when the speaker shelters, reassures, deflects, or guards against something

This category covers the nurturing and defensive spectrum — from warmly encouraging to guardedly evasive. These tags are perfect for tutorial narration, customer service scripts, parenting content, coaching voiceovers, and any context where the speaker’s job is to make the listener feel safe, supported, or guided.

Action VerbIntentDelivery [A]Tone [B]Texture [C]Subtext [D]
AssuageMake an unpleasant feeling less intense[reassuringly][gentle][smooth][comforting]
DeflectCause someone to change direction or focus[dismissive][evasive][quick][guarded]
EvadeEscape or avoid by cleverness[guardedly][nervous][unsteady][shifty]
GuardedSpeak with caution[cautiously][distrustful][tight][wary]
InsulateProtect from outside influence[defensively][protective][solid][buffering]
NurtureCare for and encourage growth[kindly][loving][maternal][caring]
ReassureRemove the doubts or fears of[comforting][steady][warm][supportive]
ShelterProtect from danger[hushed][safe][muffled][cozy]
ShieldProtect from a blow or accusation[firmly][resolute][stern][defensive]
UpholdSupport or defend a cause or spirit[proudly][noble][resonant][honorable]
Example prompt — using Reassure (ideal for onboarding, tutorials, or coaching audio)

“[comforting] [steady] [warm] You do not need to have everything figured out. Every step you take is already progress.”

[comforting] [steady] [warm]

Try These Tags in ElevenLabs Right Now

ElevenLabs gives you 10,000 characters per month on the free plan — more than enough to test every category in this guide and hear the difference for yourself.

Start Free on ElevenLabs →

How to Apply Emotion Tags in Your ElevenLabs Workflow

Understanding the tag system is one thing — knowing exactly where to put the tags inside ElevenLabs is another. The steps below walk through the practical process from blank script to emotionally layered voiceover.

1

Step One

Decide the Intention Before You Write the Tags

Before opening ElevenLabs, read your script line by line and assign an intention to each sentence. Ask: what is the speaker trying to do to the listener here? Is this line asserting authority, revealing something personal, or reassuring? Once the intention is clear, the correct category and action verb follow naturally. This step prevents random tag stacking that produces muddled results.

2

Step Two

Insert Tags Directly Into Your Script Text

In ElevenLabs, paste your script into the text input field. Place your chosen tags in square brackets immediately before the sentence they should shape. You do not need to use all four tag slots every time — one or two tags per sentence often produces cleaner results than stacking all four. Start with Tag A (Delivery) and Tag B (Tone) as your baseline, then add Texture or Subtext when you want a more specific quality.

Tip: Keep each tagged sentence short. ElevenLabs processes emotion instructions most accurately on sentences under 20 words. Break longer sentences into two shorter ones if needed.
3

Step Three

Generate, Listen, and Adjust One Tag at a Time

Generate the audio and listen back with the script in front of you. If a line does not land the way you expected, change one tag at a time rather than replacing all of them. This makes it easy to identify which dimension — Delivery, Tone, Texture, or Subtext — is producing the unwanted quality. Furthermore, the same action verb can produce noticeably different results depending on which voice style is selected, so switching the base voice is always worth testing before abandoning a tag combination.

4

Step Four

Mix Intentions Across a Full Script for Natural Flow

Real speech moves between emotional registers constantly. A great voiceover does the same. Try opening with Impart from the Reveal category to establish credibility, shifting to Urge from Persuade for your call to action, and closing with Reassure from Protect to leave the listener feeling supported. Mixing intentions across a script produces a performance arc rather than a flat emotional tone held throughout.

Example arc for a product launch voiceover: Open with [seriously] [informative] (Impart) → build to [insistently] [excited] (Urge) → close with [warmly] [calm] (Soothe).

Quick Reference — Which Tag Category to Use

If your script needs to…Use this categoryStart with this verb
Sound authoritative or urgentAssert or OverpowerCommand / Warn
Sell, charm, or encouragePersuade or SeduceUrge / Soothe
Share something personal or emotionalReveal or ConfessConfide / Impart
Build suspense or create doubtInvestigate or ProvokeProbe / Cross-examine
Comfort, guide, or reassureProtect or DefendReassure / Nurture

Frequently Asked Questions

Do ElevenLabs emotion tags work on every voice?

Most tags work across all voices, but the intensity varies by voice style. Voices with higher expressiveness settings respond more dramatically to emotion tags. If a tag produces little effect, try increasing the Expressiveness slider in the voice settings and regenerate. Voices in the “Dramatic” or “Narrative” categories tend to deliver the strongest emotional range.

How many tags can I stack in one prompt?

There is no hard limit, but one to three tags per sentence tends to produce the cleanest results. Stacking all four tag slots can work well for highly specific moments — for example, [vulnerably] [raw] [shaking] [exposed] for a confession scene — but for most voiceover work, Tag A plus Tag B is enough to shape the delivery clearly.

Can I use these tags in ElevenLabs Projects mode?

Yes. Emotion tags work in both the standard Speech Synthesis interface and in Projects mode. In Projects mode, you can apply different tags to individual paragraphs or scenes across a long-form script, which makes it particularly useful for audiobooks, course narration, and multi-chapter content where the tone needs to shift between sections.

Are these the same as ElevenLabs voice settings like Stability and Similarity?

No — they work on different levels. The Stability and Similarity sliders control the consistency and character match of the base voice. Emotion tags control the performance of each specific line. Both systems work together: a lower Stability setting gives the voice more natural variation, and the emotion tags then direct where that variation goes. For best results, set Stability between 40–60 and Similarity above 75, then layer in your emotion tags.

Is ElevenLabs free to use for testing these tags?

Yes. ElevenLabs includes 10,000 characters per month on the free plan — equivalent to roughly 10 minutes of finished audio. That is more than enough to test every category in this guide across multiple voices before deciding whether to upgrade. No credit card is required to start.

Final Thoughts

The difference between a flat AI voiceover and one that actually moves people is almost never the voice itself — it is the intention behind it. The ElevenLabs emotion tag system gives creators a structured way to think about performance before touching the record button. Five categories, fifty action verbs, and two hundred tags — all designed to do one thing: make the listener feel something.

If you are new to ElevenLabs, start with the beginner tutorial to get your account set up and your first voiceover generated. Once that is done, come back here and start layering in the tags that match your content style. The gap between what most people produce and what is actually possible with this tool is enormous — and it costs nothing to start closing it.

Put These Tags to Work Today

ElevenLabs is free to start. 10,000 characters a month, no credit card required. Open your next script, pick an intention category, and hear the difference in under five minutes.

Try ElevenLabs Free →

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