Vox was laid down by Vickers–Armstrong on 19 December 1942, and was intended as a replacement for another submarine of the same name, which, upon completion, had been given into French service. The ship was launched on 28 September 1943, and was commissioned on 20 December.[1]
The ship's first exercises occurred on 31 January 1944, when it participated in targeting and attack exercises in conjunction with,, and in Holy Loch. Vox participated alongside Vivid in exercises against Vigorous late in the day. After the exercises, Vox departed Holy Loch alongside Vivid, and both ships made for Larne, escorted by .[2]
After a round trip from Larne to Holy Lock, Vox set out with for Gibraltar, with Sturdy on its way to the Far East and Vox to stay in the Mediterranean Sea. On 3 and 4 July 1944, while patrolling off the coast of Greece, Vox sank two sailing vessels off Monernvassia and one German sailing vessel off Santorini. On 10 July, Vox torpedoed and sank the between the Andros and Tinos Islands. On 1 August, Vox claimed to have sunk a sailing vessel, and on 3 August it fired two torpedoes at an auxiliary patrol vessel, though both torpedoes missed. On 4 August, Vox sank three German vessels at Heraklion: the guard ship and the sailing vessels and .[3] Vox also sank enemy sailing vessels on 31 August, 24 September, and 25 September, when it sank the .
On 12 February 1945, Vox was put on to the slipway at Fremantle, and on 13 February was put back on the water. She was subsequently used in anti-submarine training until her scrapping in October 1946 at Cochin.