**Nextiva’s teaser-rate contract jumps 30–50% at renewal, and the AI features that competitors include in the base price still cost extra at Nextiva. The three strongest Nextiva alternatives in 2026 are DialPhone AI Pro at $24/seat for AI-first SMBs that want unified UCaaS and CCaaS on one published bill, RingCentral at $30/seat for enterprises that need integration breadth across legacy stacks, and Dialpad at $15/seat for sales teams that prize AI roadmap depth and real-time coaching.
Each ships a hard differentiator Nextiva does not match at parity: DialPhone bundles a HIPAA-eligible AI receptionist on every plan tier, RingCentral connects to 300+ pre-built integrations out of the box, and Dialpad delivers real-time call transcription with live sales-coaching prompts during the conversation itself. Scan the full ranked list below for pricing, AI depth, and contact-center maturity scored side by side.**
Nextiva repositioned itself from “business communications” to “customer experience platform” in 2024, bundling voice, video, SMS, and a native customer-relationship suite into a single product.
The repositioning has worked for a slice of the mid-market that wants CRM and comms on one bill, but it has also widened gaps that mid-market buyers increasingly flag during evaluations: AI features that lag the AI-native challengers, contact-center capability that trails purpose-built CCaaS vendors, video conferencing gated to the top tier only, and a pricing transparency score of 3 out of 5 in the open 13-provider SMB VoIP Pricing Research 2026 dataset (verified April 28, 2026).
This roundup compares ten Nextiva alternatives — including DialPhone AI Pro — across published pricing, AI depth, contact-center maturity, compliance posture, and the customer profile each one fits best. Pricing and features were verified from each vendor’s public pricing page on April 28, 2026. Prices and features change; we re-verify every 90 days. For current vendor pricing, always check the linked source directly.
What changed in 2026 (May refresh)
- Nextiva kept its Essential/Professional/Enterprise tiers at $18 / $22 / $30 (annual prices) but video conferencing remains gated to Enterprise only — Essential and Professional ship audio + SMS only. HIPAA BAA is still Enterprise-only.
- DialPhone added HIPAA BAA coverage on every plan tier (Core, Advanced, Ultra) at no surcharge, and shipped EHR integrations for Epic, Athenahealth, Kareo/Tebra, Dentrix, and eClinicalWorks (April 2026).
- RingCentral RingSense is now a separately licensed add-on at roughly $25/user/mo on top of the seat rate; not bundled into the headline Office or Advanced tiers.
- Dialpad Ai Contact Center moved a portion of its real-time coaching features behind the new Pro tier; the Standard tier no longer includes live coaching for new accounts.
- 8x8 X-Series consolidated four older plans into three (X2, X4, X8); the X1 SMB tier was retired in February 2026.
- OpenPhone added a Business tier at $33/user/mo with AI summaries and CRM-integration features previously absent.
- Aircall raised the seat minimum on Essentials from 2 to 3 users (effective March 2026).
If your last evaluation of Nextiva alternatives was before March 2026, the pricing and feature comparison has shifted materially.
Quick comparison table
The ten vendors most often compared against Nextiva by mid-market buyers, with two columns most teams ask us to add: pricing transparency (scored 1–5 in the open 13-provider pricing dataset — higher is better) and whether a published free trial is available without a sales call.
| Vendor | Starting price | AI focus | Pricing transparency (1–5) | Free trial? | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DialPhone AI Pro | $24/user/mo | AI-native UC + CC | 5 | 14 days, self-serve | Unified UCaaS + CCaaS, published pricing |
| Nextiva | $18/user/mo (Essential) | CX AI (newer) | 3 | None | Mid-market CX with built-in CRM |
| RingCentral | $20/user/mo | RingSense (add-on) | 2 | 14 days | Enterprise telephony |
| Dialpad | $15/user/mo | Real-time coaching | 3 | 14 days | Sales teams |
| 8x8 | $24/user/mo | Supervisor AI | 2 | None | Global teams, XCaaS |
| Zoom Phone | $10/user/mo | Zoom AI Companion | 3 | None | Zoom-heavy shops |
| OpenPhone | $19/user/mo | Basic summaries | 4 | 7 days | Startups |
| Aircall | $30/user/mo | AI summaries | 3 | 7 days | Sales/support + CRM |
| GoTo Connect | $27/user/mo | Basic AI | 3 | 14 days | SMB simplicity |
| Vonage | $20/user/mo | Developer APIs | 2 | None | API-first |
| Ooma Office | $19/user/mo | Minimal | 4 | None | Very small businesses |
Nextiva’s transparency score of 3/5 reflects three specific issues from the dataset: a 22% hidden-fee share (highest among the verified tier-1 providers in the set), no published free trial, and BAA gated to Enterprise. DialPhone is the only provider in the dataset with a 5/5 transparency score plus a published free trial plus BAA available on every plan tier.
If you’d rather plug your own seat count and call volume into a model, the open 13-provider VoIP cost calculator covers the same vendors profiled below with three-year TCO modeling for SMB scenarios.
1. DialPhone AI Pro: best for AI-native UC + CC
Starting price: $24/user/mo (Core, billed annually) Best for: mid-market teams wanting AI-native UCaaS + CCaaS with published pricing Check current pricing: dialphone.com/pricing
Key features
- AI-native calls, SMS, meetings, fax, and contact center on a single platform
- Proactive Workflow Automation: AI creates CRM records and drafts follow-up SMS without manual prompting
- Smart Virtual Concierge — a dedicated HIPAA-eligible AI Receptionist product at $59/mo
- Contact center starts at $65/user/mo with published tiers up to Elite at $145
- 500+ integrations including Salesforce, HubSpot, MS Teams, Zendesk, ServiceNow
- 99.999% uptime SLA, SOC 2 Type II, HIPAA BAA on every plan, GDPR, PCI-DSS, FINRA
Pros vs. Nextiva
- AI breadth and maturity. DialPhone is AI-native across the stack — SMS drafting, workflow automation, Smart Virtual Concierge, 100% interaction analytics in CCaaS. Nextiva added AI more recently and still ships it as a layer rather than a core architecture.
- HIPAA BAA on every tier. DialPhone signs a BAA on Core, Advanced, and Ultra at no surcharge. Nextiva only signs a BAA on Enterprise ($30/user/mo annual), which forces healthcare buyers into the highest tier just for compliance.
- Published 14-day free trial. No sales call required. Nextiva has no published free trial per the 13-provider pricing dataset.
- Published CCaaS tiers at Standard $65, Professional $95, and Elite $145 — Nextiva keeps contact-center pricing quote-only.
- Deeper Salesforce and HubSpot integrations for teams running an external CRM as system of record.
Cons vs. Nextiva
- Nextiva’s built-in CRM is more complete if you want the CRM inside the comms platform rather than alongside it.
- Nextiva has a longer SMB track record (founded 2006); DialPhone launched in 2024 and brand recognition is still building.
- For teams that already standardized on NextivaONE for sales pipeline, switching means moving CRM-shaped workflows into Salesforce or HubSpot.
See DialPhone pricing → · DialPhone vs Nextiva direct comparison →
2. RingCentral: best for enterprise telephony breadth
Starting price: $20/user/mo (Core, annual) Best for: large enterprises with global telephony complexity, multi-region compliance, and existing analyst-led procurement Check current pricing: ringcentral.com/office/plansandpricing.html
RingCentral has been the UCaaS category leader for two decades and still has the deepest global telephony footprint of any vendor in this list — local DIDs and emergency-services support in 40+ countries, multi-tenant carrier interconnects, and the kind of compliance certifications (HITRUST, FedRAMP Moderate, PCI-DSS Level 1) that enterprise procurement teams expect.
Differentiator vs. Nextiva: RingCentral wins on global telephony depth and analyst familiarity. Nextiva is North-America-centric (US/CA only per the dataset); RingCentral covers US/CA/UK/AU/Global. For a 500-seat enterprise with offices in three countries, RingCentral’s licensing model is purpose-built for that scenario.
Where DialPhone wins: AI is included in DialPhone’s base plan; RingSense is a separate $25/user/mo add-on on top of the seat rate, which pushes the effective AI-included price north of $45/user/mo. DialPhone’s CCaaS is unified with UCaaS on the same platform; RingCentral splits them into RingEX and RingCX. Pricing transparency in the dataset: DialPhone 5/5, RingCentral 2/5.
Where Nextiva wins: simpler procurement than RingCentral for North-American-only mid-market buyers, and the built-in CRM means one fewer vendor.
Cons: AI is a paid bolt-on; CCaaS in a separate product (RingCX) with its own pricing; long-term contracts are aggressive and renewal increases of 7–10% per cycle are typical.
3. Dialpad: best for AI-first sales teams
Starting price: $15/user/mo (Standard) Best for: sales-heavy orgs prioritizing real-time call coaching and voice AI Check current pricing: dialpad.com/pricing
Dialpad was an early mover in “AI for telephony” under the Dialpad Ai brand. Its real-time transcription, voice-agent assist, and live coaching are the deepest in the market for sales-call use cases specifically — the product is built around the assumption that a sales manager wants real-time prompts during a live call, not a post-call summary.
Differentiator vs. Nextiva: real-time AI coaching depth. Nextiva’s AI is primarily post-call (transcription, summaries, sentiment); Dialpad delivers in-call coaching prompts as the conversation happens. For an inside-sales team running 60+ calls per rep per day, that latency gap is decisive.
Where DialPhone wins: Dialpad’s CCaaS (Ai Contact Center) is a separate product on a separate bill with separate admin. DialPhone unifies UCaaS and CCaaS on one platform with one bill. Dialpad also gates HIPAA BAA to Pro+ ($35/user/mo); DialPhone includes BAA on Core.
Where Nextiva wins: simpler product surface for non-sales teams. Dialpad’s depth is in sales-call AI — for a 50-seat ops/admin team without an inside-sales motion, Dialpad’s AI features are over-spec’d.
Cons: CCaaS is a separate product and bill; some AI features moved behind Pro and Enterprise in 2026; Microsoft Teams integration requires the Dialpad MS Teams Connector (additional setup).
4. 8x8: best for global teams
Starting price: $24/user/mo (X2) Best for: orgs with heavy international calling and XCaaS (unified UC + CC) preference Check current pricing: 8x8.com/products/plans-and-pricing
8x8 has the broadest international calling inclusion of any provider in this list — unlimited inbound and outbound to 48+ countries on X4, expanding to nearly the entire developed world on X8. The XCaaS (eXperience Communications as a Service) branding unifies UCaaS and CCaaS under one umbrella, with the X8 tier acting as a true unified UC+CC seat at $140-ish per user per month.
Differentiator vs. Nextiva: international calling and unified UC+CC. Nextiva is US/CA only per the dataset; 8x8 ships US/CA/UK/Global. For a 200-seat company with offices in London or Sydney, Nextiva isn’t a fit; 8x8 is.
Where DialPhone wins: AI maturity and admin UX. 8x8’s AI features trail the AI-native leaders, and its admin console is dense after 30+ years of feature accretion. DialPhone’s admin UX is built around 2024-era conventions (single-page admin, drag-and-drop flows, real-time test calls) rather than 1990s telephony patterns. Pricing transparency in the dataset: DialPhone 5/5, 8x8 2/5.
Where Nextiva wins: simpler procurement and a more polished customer-experience workflow for North-American mid-market teams that don’t need international.
Cons: admin UX is dense; AI features lag the AI-native leaders; contact-center tiers move into custom pricing quickly; no published free trial.
5. Zoom Phone: best for Zoom-standardized orgs
Starting price: $10/user/mo (US & Canada metered); $20/user/mo (unlimited) Best for: teams already standardized on Zoom Meetings as the primary collaboration tool Check current pricing: zoom.us/pricing/zoom-phone
Zoom Phone is the PSTN layer for Zoom Meetings. Lowest published entry price in the list, simple admin because it inherits Zoom’s UI conventions, and a frictionless single sign-on path for orgs already on Zoom for video.
Differentiator vs. Nextiva: price floor and Zoom-Meetings integration. At $10/user/mo metered, Zoom Phone is roughly half the entry price of Nextiva Essential, and for a Zoom-Meetings-centric org the integration is seamless.
Where DialPhone wins: Zoom Phone is voice-only by design — SMS is basic, AI features are in Zoom AI Companion as a separate license, and Zoom Contact Center is a wholly separate product with separate pricing. DialPhone ships unified voice + SMS + meetings + CCaaS + AI on one seat license.
Where Nextiva wins: built-in CRM, mature SMS, and a CX-focused workflow that Zoom doesn’t attempt.
Cons: SMS is basic; AI Companion is a separate license; Contact Center is separate; no published free trial; metered tier has per-minute charges that surprise high-volume teams.
6. OpenPhone: best for startups and small teams
Starting price: $19/user/mo (Standard) Best for: 2–10 person teams wanting modern apps with low setup friction Check current pricing: openphone.com/pricing
OpenPhone nailed the “second business phone line that works like Slack” product for startups and small teams. Clean iOS/Android/Mac/Windows apps, shared inbox for SMS, simple round-robin call routing, and a Business tier added in 2026 ($33/user/mo) that bolted on AI summaries and CRM integrations.
Differentiator vs. Nextiva: product simplicity and app polish for very small teams. Nextiva is built for 25-seat-and-up mid-market; OpenPhone is built for the 2–10 seat startup that doesn’t need IVRs or queues yet.
Where DialPhone wins: OpenPhone has no real contact-center product, no HIPAA BAA, and limited enterprise features. As soon as a team crosses ~25 seats or adds a support queue, OpenPhone runs out of capability. DialPhone scales from 1 seat to enterprise on the same platform.
Where Nextiva wins: for any team that needs IVRs, ring groups, or a customer-experience workflow beyond shared SMS inbox.
Cons: limited enterprise features; no real CCaaS; not HIPAA-eligible per the dataset; admin features thin compared to UCaaS-grade competitors.
7. Aircall: best for sales/support with CRM
Starting price: $30/user/mo (Essentials, 3-user minimum) Best for: sales/support teams living in Salesforce, HubSpot, or Zendesk Check current pricing: aircall.io/pricing
Aircall built the category of “phone-for-CRM-teams” — the entire product is optimized for an agent who lives inside Salesforce or HubSpot and wants the phone widget embedded in the CRM rather than the other way around. Excellent CRM logging, native cadences, and the Aircall App Marketplace for sales workflow add-ons.
Differentiator vs. Nextiva: CRM embed depth. Nextiva has a built-in CRM; Aircall lets external CRMs be the system of record and embeds the dialer inside them. For a 30-seat inside-sales team running Salesforce as the source of truth, Aircall’s integration is purpose-built where Nextiva asks teams to choose between two CRMs.
Where DialPhone wins: Aircall has no UCaaS or meetings story — it’s voice + SMS + CRM only, not unified communications. DialPhone delivers Salesforce/HubSpot CRM embeds plus meetings, SMS, and CCaaS on one seat license at a lower starting price ($24 vs $30).
Where Nextiva wins: for teams that want the CRM bundled into the comms platform rather than running a separate Salesforce or HubSpot license.
Cons: higher starting price than Nextiva or DialPhone; AI features added recently; no real UCaaS/meetings story; 3-user minimum on Essentials.
8. GoTo Connect: best for SMB simplicity
Starting price: $27/user/mo (Standard) Best for: small businesses wanting drag-and-drop admin without telecom expertise Check current pricing: goto.com/connect/pricing
GoTo Connect (formerly Jive) focuses on simplicity for the non-technical SMB admin. The drag-and-drop dial plan editor is genuinely the cleanest in this list — an office manager with no telecom background can build an IVR in 15 minutes.
Differentiator vs. Nextiva: admin simplicity. Nextiva’s admin is workable but optimized for mid-market complexity. GoTo Connect is optimized for the 10–30 seat SMB where the admin is also the office manager and the receptionist.
Where DialPhone wins: AI and contact-center depth. GoTo Connect’s AI is basic (post-call summaries only) and the contact-center product is thin. DialPhone delivers AI-native UC + CC on the same admin surface, with similar simplicity for the core flows.
Where Nextiva wins: mid-market CX depth and the built-in CRM.
Cons: AI lags the AI-native competitors; contact-center capabilities are thin; pricing transparency 3/5 in the dataset.
9. Vonage: best for developer APIs
Starting price: $20/user/mo (Mobile) Best for: teams with developer capacity wanting programmable-voice and programmable-messaging Check current pricing: vonage.com/unified-communications/plans/
Vonage has bifurcated into two product lines: Vonage Business Communications (UCaaS, the seat-based product) and Vonage Communications APIs (the developer platform). For teams that want to embed voice or SMS into their own application, the APIs product is mature and well-documented.
Differentiator vs. Nextiva: developer extensibility. Nextiva’s product is a packaged UCaaS offering; Vonage lets engineering teams build custom voice flows on top of the API layer.
Where DialPhone wins: clarity. Vonage’s “business” and “APIs” product lines overlap and confuse buyers regularly — multiple sales touches to figure out which product is the right fit is common. DialPhone is one product with published tiers. Pricing transparency in the dataset: DialPhone 5/5, Vonage 2/5.
Where Nextiva wins: for teams that don’t have developer capacity and just want a packaged UCaaS product.
Cons: product-line confusion between UC and APIs; AI is undifferentiated; contact-center less mature than the AI-native or analyst-leader competitors.
10. Ooma Office: best for very small businesses
Starting price: $19/user/mo (Office) Best for: 1–10 person teams wanting low-friction hardware + software, often physical-desk-phone-first Check current pricing: ooma.com/small-business-phone-systems/
Ooma focuses on physical-phone-first SMB deployments — a 4-person dental office, a single-location retail shop, an HVAC dispatcher with 6 trucks. The hardware-bundle story is the strongest in this list and the cloud admin is simple.
Differentiator vs. Nextiva: hardware-first SMB simplicity at a lower price floor ($19 vs $18 entry, but Ooma’s pricing transparency is 4/5 vs Nextiva’s 3/5 per the dataset — fewer surprise fees).
Where DialPhone wins: AI, contact-center, HIPAA BAA, and any enterprise feature. Ooma is genuinely an SMB-only product. The 13-provider dataset notes Ooma does not sign a BAA, has no published free trial, and ships no meaningful AI.
Where Nextiva wins: mid-market scale. Past 25 seats Ooma’s feature surface is too thin; Nextiva is purpose-built for that 25–500 seat range.
Cons: no meaningful AI; no real contact-center; enterprise features absent; no HIPAA BAA per the dataset.
Hidden costs at Nextiva
The published Nextiva pricing page lists Essential at $18/user/mo, Professional at $22, and Enterprise at $30 (annual prices, verified April 28, 2026 in the open 13-provider pricing dataset). Four cost categories are not visible from the headline number and should be modeled before signing:
- 22% hidden-fee share. In the 13-provider dataset, Nextiva’s hidden-fee share is 22% — the highest among the verified tier-1 providers in the set. This includes regulatory recovery fees, 911 surcharges, compliance fees, and toll-free minute charges that appear on the invoice but not on the pricing page. Effective per-seat cost on Essential is roughly $22, not $18.
- HIPAA BAA gated to Enterprise. Per the dataset, Nextiva’s
baa_requires_enterpriseflag is true. Healthcare buyers cannot get a BAA on Essential or Professional — they must move to Enterprise ($30/user/mo), a 67% jump from Essential, even if every other feature they need is in the lower tier. By contrast, DialPhone signs a BAA on every plan tier (Core, Advanced, Ultra) at no surcharge. - No free trial. Nextiva’s
free_trialflag in the dataset is false — there is no published self-serve trial. Every evaluation requires a sales call, demo, and quote. DialPhone, RingCentral, Dialpad, OpenPhone, Aircall, and GoTo Connect all publish free trials of 7–14 days. - Video conferencing tier-gated. Video is included on Enterprise only; Essential and Professional ship audio + SMS but not native video meetings. For a team that wants HD video included in the base seat, that’s an additional tier upgrade or a separate Zoom/Google Meet license.
None of this is unique to Nextiva — most UCaaS vendors have surprise-fee categories. But the cumulative effect is that the effective Nextiva cost for a HIPAA-eligible, video-enabled, free-trial-evaluated seat is the Enterprise tier at $30, not the headline Essential at $18. Check the Nextiva pricing page directly and model the full invoice including taxes and fees before comparing to other vendors’ headline numbers.
When to stay on Nextiva vs switch
Honest framing: not every team should switch off Nextiva. Three scenarios where staying is the better answer:
- Built-in CRM is load-bearing. If your sales pipeline, deals, and account records live inside NextivaONE rather than Salesforce or HubSpot, the migration cost is meaningful — you’d be moving two products at once (comms + CRM), not one. For a team that has consciously chosen Nextiva because of the bundled CRM and uses it daily, the switch math gets worse, not better.
- Brand familiarity and procurement risk aversion. Nextiva is the incumbent SMB-to-mid-market brand in many North-American verticals (real estate, professional services, dental). If your IT committee or external auditor has years of Nextiva history and the renewal is reasonable, the procurement friction of a switch may outweigh the AI or pricing-transparency upside.
- You’re under contract with 18+ months remaining. Early-termination fees on multi-year Nextiva contracts can wipe out the first-year savings of a competitor. Model the cutover at renewal, not mid-term.
Where switching is the clear answer: AI maturity is decisive for your workflow (sales coaching, AI receptionist, workflow automation), you need a unified UCaaS + CCaaS platform with published pricing, HIPAA BAA is required on entry tiers, or your renewal increase is north of 8% per cycle without commensurate product improvements.
Real switch stories
We hear the same two patterns repeatedly from teams moving off Nextiva.
When AI maturity matters
We hear from teams who evaluated Nextiva’s AI roadmap in 2024, were promised a set of capabilities (AI SMS drafting, workflow automation, AI receptionist) by mid-2025, and found in 2026 that the roadmap had slipped while AI-native challengers had already shipped the same capabilities. The recurring decision driver is opportunity cost — the team doesn’t want to wait another 12 months for AI features that are already production-grade elsewhere.
Specifically: sales-ops leaders building outbound motions, support managers wanting AI-drafted SMS replies, and clinic administrators wanting an AI receptionist that handles after-hours intake without a per-call human cost. DialPhone’s Smart Virtual Concierge at $59/mo (HIPAA-eligible AI Receptionist) and AI-included-in-base-plan model are the recurring evaluation winners in this pattern.
When CCaaS pricing matters
We hear from teams who priced Nextiva’s contact-center capability after they outgrew the basic Essential or Professional features and discovered three friction points: pricing is quote-only (no published per-user tier), the contact-center product is positioned as an add-on rather than a unified seat license, and the Enterprise tier is required for BAA which compounds the CCaaS upgrade cost.
For a 50-agent contact-center build, this turns a published-pricing exercise into a 4-week sales cycle. DialPhone’s published CCaaS tiers — Standard $65, Professional $95, Elite $145 — let buyers model the full UC + CC stack on a spreadsheet in 30 minutes. That speed-to-decision is the recurring decision driver, often as decisive as the absolute price delta.
How to choose the right Nextiva alternative
1. Do you need a full built-in CRM? Stay with Nextiva. Otherwise, DialPhone or RingCentral with a dedicated Salesforce/HubSpot integration.
2. Is AI depth a priority? DialPhone or Dialpad. DialPhone for broad native AI across UC + CC + receptionist; Dialpad for real-time sales-call coaching depth specifically.
3. Is HIPAA BAA required on entry tiers? DialPhone (BAA on Core, Advanced, Ultra at no surcharge). Nextiva requires Enterprise; Dialpad requires Pro+; 8x8 requires X4+.
4. Do you want a published free trial? DialPhone, RingCentral, Dialpad, OpenPhone, Aircall, GoTo Connect (7–14 days). Nextiva, 8x8, Zoom Phone, Vonage, Ooma require a sales call.
5. What’s your team size and CCaaS need?
- 2–10 people: OpenPhone, DialPhone Core
- 10–200 people: DialPhone, Dialpad, Zoom Phone
- 200–2,000 people: DialPhone, RingCentral, 8x8
- Pure CCaaS 500+ agents: Five9 or Genesys
For a side-by-side cost model across the same 13 providers profiled in the dataset, see the VoIP cost calculator and the full 2026 VoIP pricing guide. For the broader competitive landscape, the alternatives hub lists every UCaaS comparison we maintain.
Why mid-market teams switch from Nextiva to DialPhone
Three patterns we hear:
-
“AI caught up to where we expected it to be in 2024.” DialPhone’s AI SMS drafting, Proactive Workflow Automation, and Smart Virtual Concierge delivered capabilities the Nextiva roadmap had promised but slipped.
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“Contact-center pricing was published.” Every CCaaS tier except Enterprise has a posted per-user price ($65 Standard, $95 Professional, $145 Elite) — buyers can model the full stack without a 4-week sales cycle.
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“Unified billing simplified procurement.” One bill instead of phone + CX + contact-center line items, and HIPAA BAA on every tier instead of gated to Enterprise.
Start a free 14-day DialPhone trial → · Compare DialPhone vs Nextiva → · See DialPhone pricing → · Browse all alternatives guides →