If you're already looking at OneAccord, you've done the hard part: you picked a tool actually built for churches, not a conference platform with a worship coat of paint. This isn't a page to talk you out of that instinct. It's the short, honest read on where a second option — VoxLive — is genuinely different, so you can decide with both in front of you. We make VoxLive, so weigh it accordingly. For the full, sourced head-to-head, read VoxLive vs. OneAccord.
01 — Credit firstWhat OneAccord already does well.
Give OneAccord its due before comparing anything. It's built by people with church-interpretation backgrounds, it trains its models on biblical vocabulary so scriptural terms come through cleaner, and it offers a moderation mode where a person can review the transcribed text before it's translated. Listeners scan a QR code — no app — and it comes with real human support. Those are genuine strengths, and if a human hand on transcript accuracy is your top priority, OneAccord is a strong, church-native pick.
02 — The one thing to weighWhere VoxLive is different.
If you're choosing between them, ask one question first: whose voice do you want in your members' ears? With OneAccord, the answer is an AI voice, checked by a person. With VoxLive it can be the interpreter your church already trusts — their own live voice carried to every phone, with AI picking up only the languages nobody on your team speaks. To OneAccord's credit, it also encourages churches to keep their interpreter teams; it just doesn't broadcast their voice. If that distinction matters in your sanctuary, it usually decides the whole comparison.
An AI-first tool proofreads the translation. VoxLive can broadcast the interpreter you already trust — and fill the rest with AI.
Two more differences worth a look: VoxLive publishes its full price ladder — Free, Starter $59, Growth $199, Pro $449, Scale $789, all-inclusive with no per-language or per-hour add-ons — so your board can price you without a quote; and it renders detected Bible verses on each listener's screen in their own translation, on every plan including free.
03 — How to decideOne Sunday beats one spreadsheet.
You don't have to resolve this from marketing pages — ours included. OneAccord offers free trial credits on request; VoxLive gives you the whole product for one real service for $5. Run each in your own sanctuary, with your own preacher and your own congregation, and let the people in the pews tell you which one reads and sounds right. That's the only comparison that counts.
Try VoxLive's side of it with the First Sunday Pass — the full product for one complete service, $5. If it doesn't work in your sanctuary, the $5 comes back.
SourcesThe facts behind this page.
- OneAccord features and pricing — oneaccord.ai, checked July 2026: church-trained models (biblical terminology), optional moderation quick-review window, QR-code no-app access, dedicated support; subscriptions from $150/month for 5 hours (one-off sessions around $40/hour are also offered), priced by languages, hours, and users, with custom quotes and free trial credits on request.
- Full sourced comparison and methodology: VoxLive vs. OneAccord for churches.
- VoxLive pricing — voxlive.app/pricing.
OneAccord is a trademark of its respective owner. VoxLive is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by OneAccord. Prices and features change — always confirm on the vendor's own site before deciding. Corrections welcome: [email protected].