TL;DR: 10,000 words a day is not a typing goal, it is a talking goal. Speaking is about three times faster than typing, and at a comfortable pace, 10,000 spoken words is roughly 90 minutes to 2 hours of actual talking spread across a normal day. Infina turns your Mac into the machine that catches all of it: hold Option to dictate anywhere, or go fully hands-free and, from across the room, just say "type" plus your words, "send" to submit, "open Notes" to switch, no key touches at all. No other dictation app completes that prompt, send, and switch-apps loop hands-free. It is $99 once (as of July 2026) with a 7-day refund, and at this word volume it pays for itself in days.

How to write 10,000 words a day: the arithmetic

Let's do the math in the open, because most "10,000 words a day" articles skip it.

A comfortable conversational pace is somewhere around 130 to 150 words a minute. Dictation is a little slower than conversation because you pause, think, and restart, so call it around 100 words a minute of usable dictated text. That is a deliberately conservative number.

At 100 usable words a minute, 10,000 words is 100 minutes of talking. Give yourself slack for slower stretches and it lands between 90 minutes and 2 hours of actual speaking, spread across the whole day.

That is it. That is the entire secret. Two hours of talking, distributed across a day you were already going to spend communicating.

Now run the same target through a keyboard. Speaking is about three times faster than typing for most people, so the identical 10,000 words is on the order of 5 to 6 hours of continuous typing. Almost nobody has that, which is why the goal sounds impossible. The full comparison is in dictation vs typing speed.

The honest part: these are draft words

Before you get excited, be clear about what you are producing. These are draft words: first drafts, emails, AI prompts, meeting notes, project updates, outlines, journal entries.

Nobody dictates 10,000 finished, publishable words in a day. Not with Infina, not with any tool. Editing is a separate job, it happens at the keyboard, and it is where drafts become prose.

That is not a loophole, it is how professional writers have always worked. Drafting and editing are different mental modes, and mixing them (polishing sentence three while sentence four waits in your head) is the slowest way to write. Dictation forces the separation: your voice drafts, your hands edit.

And here is the thing: for a huge share of your daily words, "draft" is the finished state. A Slack reply, a prompt to Claude Code, a note to yourself, a status update. Those never needed polish. They needed to exist, fast.

Where 10,000 words actually come from

Spread across a real workday, the total stops looking heroic. A plausible split:

  • Email and messages: roughly 2,000 words. Ten substantial emails and a day of chat replies get there easily.
  • AI prompts: 3,000 words or more. If you work with Claude Code, Cursor, or ChatGPT all day, you are already writing this much. You are just typing it slowly. See talk instead of type for why prompts are the perfect dictation payload.
  • Notes and thinking: roughly 2,000 words. Meeting notes, ideas captured while pacing, braindumps.
  • Actual drafting: roughly 3,000 words. The chapter, the blog post, the report. This is the block writers usually mean, and 3,000 dictated words is about 30 minutes of talking.

Total: 10,000 words, none of it typed, all of it real output. Writers who want to push the drafting block higher should read dictation for writers on Mac.

The workflow that makes it real

The math only works if capturing words costs you nothing. That takes two modes and one discipline.

Push-to-talk for bursts

Hold the Option key, speak, release. Infina types your words into whatever app is focused: Mail, Slack, a terminal, a Google Doc. This is the workhorse for replies and short thoughts, dozens of times a day.

Transcription runs entirely on your Mac (on the Apple Neural Engine), so it is fast, works offline, and your audio never leaves your device.

Hands-free for flow

This is where Infina is genuinely alone, and where the big drafting blocks happen. Toggle hands-free mode with a double-tap of Cmd, then push your chair back.

Say "type" plus your words, and they are typed into the focused app. Say "send" and Infina presses Enter. Say "open Notes" or "open Claude Code" and you have switched apps, all without touching a key.

Every other dictation app still chains you to the keyboard: a hotkey to trigger, Enter to send, Cmd-Tab to switch. Infina completes the whole loop by voice, which means you can draft while pacing, stretching, or holding a coffee three feet from the desk. That freedom is what makes 90 minutes of daily talking feel like nothing. The full setup is in our voice first workflow guide.

Fair print: hands-free is our newest feature, it ships off by default and is labeled experimental. Push-to-talk is the mature fallback, and it alone gets you to 10,000 words.

Draft-then-edit discipline

Three rules keep the volume honest:

  1. Never edit by voice. When you misspeak, say the sentence again and move on. Fixing it now costs flow; fixing it later costs seconds.
  2. Talk in beats, not essays. One thought per breath. Short spoken paragraphs are easier to say and easier to edit.
  3. Schedule the edit pass. Dictate in the morning when your head is loud, edit in the afternoon at the keyboard. Two modes, two times of day.

What about polish?

Infina's base output is raw dictation by design: your words, cleaned up by fast on-device formatting, not rewritten. For AI prompts, notes, and messages, raw is exactly right.

If you want your dictated drafts to come out with polished punctuation, grammar, and formatting, the optional cloud add-on does that for $10 a month with a 7-day free trial, using our cloud AI providers (Together AI and Groq). That beats the $15-a-month subscription dictation apps at their own game: you own the app for $99 (as of July 2026), and you rent the polish only if and when you want it.

At 10,000 words a day, the economics are absurd in your favor. One purchase, a 7-day no-questions refund, every 1.x update included. Details on pricing.

FAQ

Can you really write 10,000 words a day? Yes, if you count all your words (emails, prompts, notes, drafts) and you dictate them instead of typing them. At around 100 usable words a minute of dictation, 10,000 words is roughly 100 minutes of talking spread across a day. What you cannot do is produce 10,000 polished, publishable words in a day; drafting and editing are separate jobs.

How long does it take to dictate 10,000 words? Roughly 90 minutes to 2 hours of actual speaking at a comfortable pace. That sounds long as one sitting, but spread over a workday of emails, prompts, notes, and drafting blocks, it is a normal amount of talking.

Is dictation really faster than typing? For most people, speaking is about three times faster than typing. The same 10,000 words that take under 2 hours to say would take on the order of 5 to 6 hours of continuous typing.

Do I still need to edit dictated writing? Yes. Dictation produces draft words, and editing is a separate keyboard job. That separation is a feature: drafting by voice and editing by hand keeps you out of the slow habit of polishing every sentence as you write it.

What do I need to run Infina? A Mac with Apple Silicon. Transcription runs on-device by default and works offline. The base product is English-only; the optional $10/month cloud add-on adds more languages and polished output.

How much does Infina cost? $99 one-time as of July 2026, with a 7-day no-questions-asked money-back guarantee and every 1.x update included. There is no subscription and no free trial for the core product; the cloud add-on has its own 7-day trial.

The bottom line

10,000 words a day was never a discipline problem. It was a bandwidth problem: your thoughts run at talking speed and your keyboard runs at typing speed.

Close that gap and the number turns ordinary. About 100 words a minute, about 100 minutes a day, spoken into the emails, prompts, notes, and drafts you were writing anyway. Edit at the keyboard, draft with your voice.

Infina is the Mac app built for that life: on-device dictation everywhere you type, and the only hands-free loop that types, sends, and switches apps by voice. $99 once (as of July 2026), 7-day refund, and the first 10,000-word day usually happens inside the refund window.