The Short Answer: There Isn't a Single Number
If you came here for one figure, here is the honest version: there isn't one. What a business phone system costs in Australia depends on how many people use it, which features you genuinely need, whether you buy in the cloud or on-premise, and, above all, how much a provider tucks into add-ons. What we can give you are real, usable ranges and a method for turning any quote into a number you can trust.
For the way almost every Australian business buys in 2026 — a cloud-hosted VoIP system — you pay a per-user, per-month subscription. Entry plans start around $10 to $20 per user, full-featured business plans typically sit around $25 to $35, and premium tiers run $35 to $50 or more. A five-person office might therefore spend on the order of $100 to $200 a month all-in; a 25-person business roughly $600 to $1,000, depending heavily on what is bundled.
The old alternative — a traditional on-premise PBX bolted to your building — inverts the cost structure entirely: a large upfront capital purchase (often $8,000 to $30,000-plus for hardware, licensing and installation) followed by ongoing maintenance. For the overwhelming majority of businesses that model no longer adds up, especially now the copper PSTN and ISDN lines it relied on have been switched off under the NBN migration.
Every figure in this guide is an illustrative range to help you budget and sanity-check quotes, not a fixed price — actual costs vary by provider, call volume and contract. What matters far more than any headline rate is understanding what drives the price and where the surprises hide. That is what the rest of this guide unpacks.
$10–50
typical per-user, per-month cloud VoIP range (illustrative)
$8k–30k+
typical upfront on-premise PBX cost before ongoing fees
3
core pricing models you will encounter
$0
minimum users with VOCPhone
The Three Pricing Models Explained
Before you can compare quotes, you need to know which model each one uses. Get this wrong and you will pit a monthly figure against an upfront figure and reach a nonsense conclusion. There are three models in the Australian market.
1. Per-user, per-month (the modern cloud standard)
This is how virtually every cloud VoIP and cloud phone system is sold in 2026. You pay a fixed price per person (each "seat" or "user") every month, and that person gets a business number, the apps, and whatever features their tier includes. Add a staff member, add a seat; remove one, remove a seat. It is predictable, scales cleanly, and turns your phone system from a capital purchase into a simple operating expense. The catch to watch: some providers impose a minimum number of users, so a sole trader ends up paying for seats nobody uses.
2. Per-line / per-channel (the legacy hangover)
Older, telco-style offerings sometimes price by "line" or "channel" — the number of simultaneous calls the system can carry — rather than by user. You might buy four channels shared across ten staff. It can look cheaper for a business that rarely has many calls at once, but it is inflexible: hit the channel limit and callers get engaged tones, and sizing it is guesswork. Per-line pricing is a hangover from the ISDN era and is fading fast now copper has been retired.
3. On-premise capex (buy-and-own hardware)
With a traditional on-premise PBX you buy the equipment outright: the PBX unit, handsets, licensing, cabling and professional installation. That is a capital expense you own and depreciate, followed by ongoing costs for maintenance contracts and eventual hardware replacement every five to ten years. It offers maximum control and no monthly per-user fee, but the upfront outlay is steep and the total cost of ownership is usually higher than cloud once you count everything. We break the numbers down in the true cost of ownership section.
Why the Model Matters When You Compare
A $12,000 on-premise quote and a $30-per-user cloud quote are not comparable until you spread both over the same period and add the same ongoing costs. Over five years, that $30-per-user plan for a 10-person team is around $18,000 in subscription — but with zero upfront outlay, no maintenance contract and no hardware to replace. Always convert every quote to a total cost over three to five years before deciding.
Typical Australian Tiers and Ranges
Most cloud providers split their offering into two or three tiers, and a lot of the real cost lives there, because the features a business genuinely needs — call recording, integrations, analytics, AI — are often pushed into the dearer plans. Here is a realistic picture, with illustrative Australian pricing.
| Tier | Typical price / user / month | What you usually get | Commonly missing (add-on) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry / Starter | $10–$20 | Calling, voicemail, basic forwarding, one app | Call recording, integrations, AI, analytics |
| Business / Pro | $20–$35 | Above plus IVR menus, call queues, some integrations, SMS | AI agents, advanced analytics, extra integrations |
| Premium / Enterprise | $35–$50+ | Full feature set, advanced analytics, most integrations | AI often still metered or per-seat |
| VOCPhone | Transparent per-user price | Full feature set, AI Phone Agents, integrations, apps — all included | Nothing gated: no minimum users, price-match guarantee |
Notice the pattern in the first three rows: the cheaper the headline tier, the more of the genuinely useful features get stripped out and sold back to you. A business that signs up for a $15 starter plan and then adds call recording, a couple of integrations and AI can easily end up paying more than a $30 all-inclusive plan, while juggling a messier invoice. This is why the tier structure matters as much as the base price.
The "Cheap Plan" Illusion
The lowest advertised price is almost never what a real business pays. The entry tier gets you in the door; the features you need day to day live one or two tiers up, or as paid add-ons. When budgeting, price the plan that has everything you need — not the cheapest one on the page.
What's Included vs What Becomes an Add-On
The single biggest driver of your real monthly bill is the line between "included" and "add-on". Two providers can quote the same per-user price and deliver wildly different value depending on what sits inside it. Here are the features most likely to be charged separately, and what to ask about each.
AI Phone Agents
The most common upsell. Many providers gate AI behind top tiers or charge per minute or per seat. Ask whether AI is truly included, or another line on the invoice.
Call Recording
Frequently an add-on, sometimes with separate storage fees. Confirm whether recording is included and how long recordings are retained at no extra cost.
Integrations
CRM and accounting links (Salesforce, HubSpot, Zoho, Xero) are often reserved for higher tiers or billed per connector. Check which are native and included.
Call Minutes
Some plans include unlimited local and national calls; others meter per minute or bill 1300/1800 inbound separately. Clarify what "unlimited" actually covers.
Analytics & Reporting
Basic call logs are usually free; meaningful dashboards are often a premium feature. Ask what reporting the quoted tier includes.
Business SMS
Two-way texting from your business number is sometimes bundled, sometimes charged per message. If you rely on appointment reminders, price this explicitly.
The reason this matters so much: a stack of $10-to-$30 add-ons can quietly double your per-user cost. A platform advertised at $15 per user that then charges $15 for AI, $8 for recording and $10 for integrations is really a $48 platform — dearer than a genuinely all-inclusive competitor. This is exactly why AI business phone systems should be compared on total cost, not the headline rate.
How VOCPhone Handles Add-Ons
Rather than splitting features across tiers, VOCPhone bundles its full feature set and AI Phone Agents into one transparent per-user price. The AI agents answer in natural Australian accents and are part of the platform, not a metered extra. Because VOCPhone owns and operates its own network, there is no wholesale carrier taking a margin in the middle — which is part of why the price you are quoted is close to the price you actually pay.
The Hidden Costs That Blow Out Your Bill
Beyond feature add-ons sits a second layer of costs that rarely appears on the pricing page but shows up on the invoice. These are the ones that catch businesses out. Run this list past any provider before you sign.
Minimum seat requirements
Some providers enforce a minimum number of users, commonly three. A sole trader or two-person business then pays for seats it never uses. A "$30 per user" plan with a three-user minimum is really $90 a month before you make a single call. VOCPhone has no minimum user requirement, so you pay for exactly what you use.
Setup, onboarding and professional-services fees
One-off implementation fees range from a few hundred dollars to several thousand for larger deployments, and some providers simply leave you to configure everything yourself. Ask whether onboarding is included and whether a real person helps. VOCPhone provides guided onboarding with an Australian-based team that handles most of the configuration and porting.
Hardware and desk phones
Cloud systems run on free desktop and mobile apps, so handsets are optional. If you want physical desk or cordless phones, budget for them — quality IP handsets typically range from around $100 to $400 each. VOCPhone supplies certified desk and cordless business handsets and headsets for teams that want them, but the point stands: hardware should be a choice, not a mandatory cost baked into the system.
Number porting fees
Keeping your existing business numbers involves a porting process, and some providers charge per number. VOCPhone handles number portability for you and keeps your old service live until the port completes, so there is zero downtime.
Per-minute and per-minute AI charges
Watch for calls billed per minute, inbound 1300/1800 charged separately, and, increasingly, AI billed per minute of conversation. Per-minute AI can be the nastiest surprise of all, because a busy month of AI-answered calls can dwarf your base subscription. Always ask whether AI usage is capped, metered, or included.
Contract lock-in and exit fees
Multi-year contracts with auto-renewal and early-termination penalties are common, particularly from legacy telcos. If a deal looks cheap, check the term and what it costs to leave. Flexibility has real value: your business changes, and your phone system should change with it.
The Five Questions That Expose Hidden Costs
Ask every provider these in writing: (1) Is there a minimum number of users? (2) What is the one-off setup or onboarding fee? (3) Are AI, call recording and integrations included or extra, and is AI metered per minute? (4) Is number porting handled for me, and is there any downtime? (5) What is the contract length and the cost to exit early? The answers turn a vague quote into a real, comparable number.
Cloud vs On-Premise: The True Cost of Ownership
The most misleading comparison in business telephony is a one-time on-premise price against a monthly cloud price. To decide honestly, total the true cost of ownership of each over the same period — typically three to five years — including every ongoing expense.
What an on-premise PBX really costs
The upfront capital purchase is only the start. A realistic on-premise budget includes the PBX hardware and licensing, desk handsets, cabling and installation, plus recurring costs most people forget: SIP trunking or line rental, an annual maintenance contract (often 15–20% of the hardware cost per year), software updates, and a technician when something breaks. Then, every five to ten years, the lot needs replacing. There is also a risk cost: if the box, the power, or the internet fails, your phones stay down until someone physically attends.
What a cloud system really costs
A cloud system has little or no upfront hardware cost (apps are free, handsets optional), a predictable per-user subscription, and the provider handles maintenance, updates, security and uptime as part of the fee. Scaling is a setting change, not a project, and if your office loses power or internet the platform reroutes calls to mobile apps automatically. The trade-off is that you never "own" the system — but for almost everyone that is a feature, not a bug.
| Cost factor | On-Premise PBX | Cloud / Hosted (e.g. VOCPhone) |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront hardware & install | ✗ $8,000–$30,000+ | ✓ $0 required (apps free) |
| Monthly cost | ~ Line rental + maintenance | ✓ Predictable per-user fee |
| Maintenance & updates | ✗ Your responsibility / contract | ✓ Handled by provider |
| Scaling up or down | ✗ Hardware project | ✓ Add/remove users in minutes |
| Hardware replacement | ✗ Every 5–10 years | ✓ None |
| Business continuity | ✗ Down if site power/internet fails | ✓ Auto reroute to mobile |
| AI Phone Agents | ✗ Not available | ✓ Included with VOCPhone |
| Works after PSTN/ISDN retirement | ~ Needs SIP retrofit | ✓ Built for the NBN era |
The verdict is not subtle: for the great majority of Australian businesses, cloud wins on total cost of ownership, and the gap has widened now the copper PSTN and ISDN network has been retired. On-premise PBXs were designed around those legacy lines; keeping one running in 2026 means retrofitting SIP trunking and still carrying the maintenance overhead. For the full side-by-side, see our guide on hosted PBX vs on-premise PBX.
Worked Cost Scenarios: 5, 10 and 25 Users
Ranges are useful, but nothing beats seeing the numbers add up for a business your size. Below are three worked examples using illustrative figures — realistic for budgeting, not fixed quotes. Each assumes a full-featured cloud plan (not the stripped-back entry tier) so the comparison is honest.
Scenario A: 5-user small business
Think a small agency, clinic or trades office. Five people, each needing calling, desktop and mobile apps, and ideally AI to answer overflow.
- Typical competitor path: 5 users × $25 base = $125/month, plus AI add-on at ~$15/user = $75, plus call recording ~$8/user = $40. Real total ≈ $240/month, plus a one-off setup fee.
- All-inclusive path (VOCPhone-style): 5 users on one per-user price with AI, recording and integrations already included, no minimum-seat penalty and no setup fee. The quoted number is close to the number you pay.
Scenario B: 10-user growing business
A busier operation with a couple of departments, a reception flow and CRM integration needs.
- Typical competitor path: 10 users × $30 = $300/month base, plus AI ~$15/user = $150, plus integrations reserved for a higher tier bumping everyone up ~$5/user = $50. Real total ≈ $500/month before call charges.
- All-inclusive path: 10 users on one per-user price with AI and integrations bundled works out roughly $250–$350/month depending on the plan, without the stacked add-ons, and the price-match guarantee keeps the headline rate honest.
Scenario C: 25-user established business
Multiple teams, higher call volume, analytics genuinely needed, and no desire to run a phone system in-house.
- On-premise path: ~$18,000–$28,000 upfront for hardware, licensing and install, plus maintenance and line rental of perhaps $400–$700/month, and a hardware refresh due within a decade. No AI.
- Cloud all-inclusive path: 25 users on a full-featured per-user plan, roughly $600–$1,000/month all-in, with AI, analytics, integrations, updates and support included, zero upfront hardware, and the ability to scale as teams change.
Reading These Scenarios
The dollar figures are illustrative and will vary by provider, call volume and contract — treat them as a budgeting sanity-check, not a quote. The consistent lesson across all three sizes is the same: the base per-user rate is rarely the real cost. Add-ons, minimum seats and setup fees are where quotes diverge, and where an all-inclusive per-user price with a price-match guarantee tends to come out ahead.
How to Compare Quotes Properly
Once you have two or three quotes in hand, the goal is to make them genuinely comparable. Marketing pages are designed to look alike; the differences live in the detail. Here is a practical method.
Normalise to total monthly cost
For each quote, add the base per-user price × number of users, then every add-on you will actually use (AI, recording, integrations, analytics, SMS), then an averaged monthly figure for one-off fees (setup, porting) spread over 12 months. Now you have a real, comparable monthly number.
Factor in the contract term
Multiply the total monthly cost by the contract length and note any early-exit penalty. A cheaper monthly rate locked into a three-year contract with steep exit fees is often worse value than a marginally higher rate you can leave freely.
Compare like features, not like prices
Make sure each quote includes the same feature set. If one bundles AI and another charges for it, they are not the same product at the same price. Build a checklist and tick each provider against it.
Weigh the intangibles
Support hours and location, whether the provider owns its network, onshore hosting and call quality all carry real financial value even though they never appear as a line item. A cheaper system with offshore support that takes days to respond can cost you far more in lost calls than you saved on the invoice.
Use a price-match guarantee
If a provider offers to match a genuine competitor quote, do the comparison work above first, then bring your best comparable quote. VOCPhone's price-match guarantee means the transparent, network-owning option does not cost you a premium.
The base per-user rate is the price you notice. The add-ons, minimum seats and exit fees are the price you actually pay. Comparing on the first and ignoring the second is how businesses overspend for years.
— The single most useful habit when reading a phone-system quote
How VOCPhone Prices It
Everything above points to one conclusion: the fairest phone-system pricing is simple, all-inclusive and free of traps. That is how VOCPhone is built, and here is what it means for your budget.
Transparent Per-User Pricing
One clear per-user, per-month price with the full feature suite included. No confusing tier ladder, no stripped-back plan designed to push you upward.
AI Included as Standard
AI Phone Agents that answer in natural Australian accents are part of the platform, not a metered per-minute or per-seat add-on.
No Minimum Users
Start with one seat or one hundred. You pay for exactly what you use, with no three-user minimum inflating your bill before you make a call.
Price-Match Guarantee
Bring a genuine competitor quote and we will match it. Transparent pricing that stays competitive, so clarity never costs you a premium.
We Own the Network
VOCPhone owns and operates its own Australian network rather than reselling one, which underpins 99.99% uptime and removes a wholesale margin from your bill.
Australian, 24/7 Human Support
Australian-owned and hosted, with round-the-clock support from real people here — no overseas call centres, no offshore data, no DIY setup.
The practical upshot: with VOCPhone the price you are quoted is close to the price you pay. There is no AI upcharge, no minimum-seat trap, and no offshore support queue eating into the savings. You get the full feature set, AI Phone Agents, and native integrations with Salesforce, HubSpot, Zoho, Xero, Monday and 1000+ other apps, all in one per-user price, backed by a price-match guarantee and a network VOCPhone controls itself. That is what transparent pricing actually looks like. Explore the current plans and pricing or the price guarantee for the detail.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a business phone system cost in Australia?
For a modern cloud (VoIP) phone system, most Australian businesses pay a per-user, per-month subscription that typically ranges from around $10 to $50 per user as an illustrative guide, depending on features and tier. On top of that you may pay for optional desk handsets and one-off setup or porting fees. A traditional on-premise PBX flips this to a large upfront outlay, often $8,000 to $30,000-plus for hardware, licensing and installation, plus ongoing maintenance. VOCPhone uses transparent per-user pricing with AI Phone Agents and the full feature set included, no minimum users, and a price-match guarantee on any genuine competitor quote.
What is a fair per-user price for a VoIP phone system in Australia?
As a rough guide, entry plans start around $10 to $20 per user per month, mid-tier business plans sit around $20 to $35, and feature-rich tiers run $35 to $50-plus. Price alone is misleading: a $15 plan that charges extra for AI, call recording and integrations can cost more in practice than a $30 plan that includes everything. Always compare what is bundled against what becomes an add-on. VOCPhone includes AI and its full feature set in one per-user price rather than splitting them across tiers.
What hidden costs should I watch for in a phone system quote?
The usual hidden costs are minimum seat requirements (some providers force a three-user minimum, so you pay roughly $90 a month before making a call), setup and onboarding fees, desk-phone hardware, per-minute AI or call-recording charges, add-on fees for integrations and analytics, number porting fees, and multi-year lock-in contracts with early-exit penalties. Always ask for the total monthly cost including every add-on you will actually use. VOCPhone has no minimum users and applies a price-match guarantee, so the quote you get is close to the price you pay.
Is a cloud phone system cheaper than an on-premise PBX?
For the vast majority of Australian small and mid-sized businesses, yes. A cloud system has little or no upfront hardware cost and a predictable per-user subscription, while an on-premise PBX needs thousands of dollars upfront for hardware, licensing and installation, plus ongoing maintenance and eventual replacement. Totalled over three to five years, cloud almost always wins, especially now the copper PSTN and ISDN have been retired under the NBN migration, removing the traditional lines an on-premise PBX relied on.
Do I have to pay extra for AI on a business phone system?
Often, yes. Many providers advertise as AI-powered but gate AI agents, transcription and analytics behind their most expensive tiers, or charge separate per-minute or per-seat fees that can add $15 to $30 per user. That turns an advertised all-in-one platform into a stack of add-ons. VOCPhone takes the opposite approach and includes its AI Phone Agents, which answer in natural Australian accents, as part of the standard platform rather than a paid extra.
How much does it cost to run a phone system for a 10-person business?
As an illustrative example, a 10-user cloud phone system on a mid-tier plan of around $25 to $35 per user works out to roughly $250 to $350 per month, or $3,000 to $4,200 a year, before optional hardware. Watch for add-ons: if AI, call recording and integrations are billed separately at, say, $15 per user each, the real figure climbs sharply. With VOCPhone those features are included in the per-user price, and the price-match guarantee keeps the headline rate competitive.
Are there setup or installation fees for a business phone system?
It depends on the provider. Some charge one-off setup, onboarding or professional-services fees ranging from a few hundred to several thousand dollars, and some leave you to configure the system yourself. Others include onboarding at no extra charge. VOCPhone provides guided onboarding with an Australian-based team, so you are supported through configuration and number porting rather than paying a separate implementation fee or setting it up alone.
What to Read Next
This guide covered what a phone system costs and how to compare quotes. These related reads go deeper into the buying decision, from choosing the right system to the cloud-versus-landline question and AI economics.