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France edition · 10 products ranked · Verified 2026-05-23

Top 10 Customer Messaging Infrastructure in France for 2026

Independent French CPaaS ranking, EUR pricing, RGPD + Arcep compliance, LCEN for B2C marketing, French data residency, Twilio + Infobip + Telnyx lead.

France verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-23

French CPaaS is well-served by global vendors with EU data residency. Twilio holds French multi-channel CPaaS mindshare. Infobip is strong on French emerging-market and WhatsApp depth. Telnyx is the cost-led choice with EU data residency on its owned network. Bird (Amsterdam-built) and Sinch via Mailjet (Paris-built, Sinch-owned) cover French EU-resident SMB CPaaS. Sarbacane (Lille-built) is the French SMB local champion for SMS + email.

Picks for France

  • French multi-channel CPaaS (the default): Twilio Deepest French CPaaS product surface with EU data residency.
  • French firms wanting deep WhatsApp Business: Infobip Croatian-origin. Deepest WhatsApp implementation among CPaaS vendors. Strong EU routing.
  • French cost-led dev team with EU data residency: Telnyx Dublin-headquartered. Owned private IP network. EU data residency. Lowest published per-message rates.
  • French SMB EU-resident multi-channel: Bird (formerly MessageBird) or Sinch via Mailjet Both European-anchored with EU data residency by default. Mailjet is Paris-built under Sinch.
  • French SMB SMS + email local champion: Sarbacane (local champion) Lille-built. French SMB SMS + email. RGPD-native, French support.
Market context

How the customer messaging infrastructure market looks in France

French CPaaS is well-served by global vendors with EU data residency. Twilio (San Francisco-built) holds French multi-channel CPaaS mindshare with the deepest French product surface and EU data residency support. Infobip (Croatian-origin) is strong on French emerging-market routing and deep WhatsApp Business implementation. Telnyx (Dublin-headquartered) is the cost-led choice with EU data residency on its owned private IP network.

Bird (Amsterdam-built) and Sinch via Mailjet (Paris-built under Sinch since 2019) cover French EU-resident SMB CPaaS. Plivo (Austin-headquartered) covers French dev teams wanting predictable per-message pricing. Vonage (Ericsson-owned) retains French voice-anchored deployments.

Among French-built local champions: Sarbacane (Lille-built) is the French SMB SMS + email local champion with strong RGPD posture; Mailjet (Paris-built, Sinch-owned since 2019) anchors French transactional + marketing email and also supports French SMS via Sinch portfolio; smsmode (French-built) is a French SMS API specialist; OVHcloud SMS is the French sovereign-cloud SMS option for sensitive French deployments.

The French CPaaS market is shaped by RGPD enforced strictly by CNIL, French data residency strongly preferred for compliance-sensitive deployments, LCEN (Loi pour la confiance dans l'économie numérique) for B2C marketing SMS opt-in, Arcep (French telecom regulator) number-portability and CLI rules, Toubon Law requiring French language for customer-facing content, and Olive Tree / European Sovereign Cloud considerations for sensitive French public-sector and regulated-industry deployments.

The 2026 French dynamics: CNIL enforcement on phone-number mishandling has increased 2024-2026; French SMS scams and CLI-spoofing fraud have driven Arcep enforcement; French sovereign-cloud requirements affect public-sector CPaaS procurement; A2P 10DLC US-mandates do not apply to French-only senders but French firms with US customers must register.

Compliance & local rules

RGPD enforced strictly by CNIL — vendor EU data residency strongly preferred. LCEN (Loi pour la confiance dans l'économie numérique) requires opt-in for B2C marketing SMS; transactional largely outside scope but commercial content in transactional can trigger LCEN. Arcep (French telecom regulator) number-portability and CLI presentation rules. Toubon Law requires French language for customer-facing content. French Code de la consommation Articles L. 222-16 et seq. for B2C marketing. CNIL guidance on legitimate interest for B2B messaging. Olive Tree / European Sovereign Cloud considerations for sensitive French deployments. Hamon Law (2014) for B2C contract-bearing messaging. AWS Frankfurt and OVHcloud Paris regions provide French data residency.

At a glance

Quick comparison, ranked for France

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
1 Twilio
Engineering-led teams; mid-market through Fortune 500
$0 $0 4.2 Global; carrier coverage in 180+ countries
8 Infobip
Mid-market through Fortune 500 enterprise
Quote - 4.5 Global; strong emerging-market and EMEA coverage
7 Telnyx
Cost-driven dev teams; SMB through mid-market
$0 $0 4.6 Global; strong US and EU coverage
4 Bird (formerly MessageBird)
European-anchored mid-market through enterprise
$0 $0 4.0 Global; strong EMEA coverage
2 Sinch
Mid-market through enterprise; multi-channel buyers
$0 $0 4.1 Global; strong in Europe, APAC, US
5 Plivo
Cost-conscious dev teams; SMB through mid-market
$0 $0 4.5 Global; strong US and India routing
3 Vonage
Voice-anchored mid-market through enterprise
$0 $0 4.3 Global; strong voice termination via Ericsson telco relationships
6 Bandwidth
US voice-anchored enterprise; UCaaS platforms
$0 $0 4.3 US-primary; global voice termination expanding
9 Kaleyra (Tata Communications)
Mid-market through enterprise; India and Italy strong
Quote - 4.3 Global; strong India and Italy
10 Tanla (Karix)
India enterprise; banking, government, telecom, e-commerce
$0 $0 4.3 India-primary; international expanding

*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.

Verified local pricing

What buyers in France actually pay

Median annual deal size by employee band, in EUR. Crowdsourced from anonymized buyer disclosures.

Product Employee band Median annual (EUR) Sample Notes
Twilio French mid-market 500K SMS/month €8,400 32 Pay-per-message EUR-billed
Infobip French enterprise multi-channel €60,000 24 Multi-channel custom contract
Telnyx French dev team 500K SMS/month €4,800 18 Owned network EUR-billed
Bird (formerly MessageBird) French SMB multi-channel €6,000 21 European pricing EUR-billed
Sinch French mid-market multi-channel via Mailjet €18,000 19 Multi-channel bundle EUR-billed
Local challengers

France-built or France-strong vendors worth knowing

Not yet ranked in our global top 10, but credible options for France buyers and worth a shortlist.

Sarbacane

Visit ↗

Lille-built. French SMB SMS + email. RGPD-native.

Mailjet (Sinch)

Visit ↗

Paris-built (Sinch-owned). French transactional email + SMS via Sinch portfolio.

smsmode

Visit ↗

French-built SMS API specialist. RGPD-native, French support.

OVHcloud SMS

Visit ↗

Roubaix-based. French sovereign-cloud SMS for sensitive deployments.

Octopush

Visit ↗

French-built SMS API for SMB.

Esendex France

Visit ↗

UK-built with French presence. Mid-market SMS + voice.

The France ranking

All 10, ranked for France

Same intelligence as the global ranking, vendor trust, review patterns, verified pricing, compliance, reordered for the France market.

#1

Twilio

Category-defining CPaaS. Deepest product surface across SMS, voice, WhatsApp, Verify, and Flex.

Founded 2008 · San Francisco, CA · public · 10–100,000 employees
G2 4.2 (480)
Capterra 4.4
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Twilio

Twilio is the category-defining CPaaS, founded in 2008 in San Francisco and public on NYSE since 2016 (TWLO). The product surface is the deepest in the category — Programmable Messaging (SMS, MMS, RCS), Programmable Voice, WhatsApp Business Platform, Verify (OTP and verification), Lookup (number validation), Studio (no-code flow builder), Conversations (cross-channel threading), and Flex (contact-center-as-a-service). Twilio is rarely the cheapest CPaaS at per-message unit cost — published US SMS is around $0.0083 per segment outbound — but maintains a pricing premium that buyers consistently trade for product depth, SDK quality, and global carrier coverage. The buyer decision against Twilio is the feature-depth vs unit-cost trade-off, not a question of capability.

Best for

Engineering-led teams building multi-channel customer messaging at scale who prioritize product depth, global coverage, and SDK quality over per-message unit cost.

Worst for

Pure cost-driven high-volume US SMS senders where Plivo, Telnyx, or Bandwidth typically win on published per-message pricing.

Strengths

  • Deepest product surface in the category — SMS, MMS, voice, WhatsApp, RCS, Verify, Studio, Lookup, Flex
  • Global carrier coverage across 180+ countries with carrier-grade routing
  • Public-company financial transparency (NYSE: TWLO 10-K)
  • Strong SDK and documentation across major languages
  • Studio no-code flow builder for non-engineering teams
  • Programmatic 10DLC registration and short-code provisioning
  • Verify reduces OTP development time materially vs DIY

Weaknesses

  • Rarely the cheapest at per-message unit cost — Plivo, Telnyx published rates often 20-30% below
  • WhatsApp pricing is Meta-set per-conversation, Twilio resells at modest markup
  • Cross-sell pressure across Segment, Flex, and Engage felt by some buyers as bundling pressure
  • Account suspensions for trust-and-safety triggers have generated friction in 2023-2024 reviews

Pricing tiers

public
  • SMS US outbound
    $0.0083 per outbound SMS segment (US long code)
    $0 /mo
  • SMS US inbound
    $0.0083 per inbound SMS segment (US)
    $0 /mo
  • Voice US outbound
    $0.014 per minute outbound (US local)
    $0 /mo
  • WhatsApp Business
    Meta per-conversation rates + Twilio platform fee
    $0 /mo
  • Long-code number
    Per number per month
    $1.15 /mo
  • Short code
    US short code rental starts at $1,000 per month
    $1000 /mo
  • Flex contact center
    Per active user per hour; custom enterprise pricing
    Quote
Watch for
  • · 10DLC TCR registration fees and per-segment carrier pass-through
  • · International SMS varies widely by destination — emerging-market rates often 5-15x US
  • · Twilio Engage and Flex priced separately from core messaging
  • · Short-code rental at $1,000/month meaningfully more expensive than long-code

Key features

  • +Programmable Messaging (SMS, MMS, RCS)
  • +Programmable Voice with PSTN and SIP
  • +WhatsApp Business Platform reseller
  • +Verify (OTP, TOTP, push verification)
  • +Lookup (number validation and carrier metadata)
  • +Studio no-code flow builder
  • +Conversations cross-channel threading
  • +Flex contact-center-as-a-service
  • +Twilio Segment CDP integration
400+ integrations
SalesforceHubSpotSegmentZendeskStripeAWSMicrosoft Dynamics
Geography
Global; carrier coverage in 180+ countries
#8

Infobip

Croatian-origin conversational CPaaS with strong emerging-market routing and WhatsApp depth.

Founded 2006 · Vodnjan, Croatia · private · 100–100,000 employees
G2 4.5 (280)
Capterra 4.5
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Infobip

Infobip is the Croatian-origin CPaaS founded in Vodnjan in 2006, with a quietly strong global footprint built over two decades — operating its own SMS routing infrastructure across emerging markets where US-anchored vendors typically rely on aggregators. The company received a $200M+ growth investment in 2020 from One Equity Partners, valuing the business as a CPaaS unicorn at that time. The product surface is broad: SMS, voice, WhatsApp Business Platform (where Infobip has deep depth), Viber, RCS, Messenger, and a conversational platform (Moments, Conversations) on top of the core APIs. Pricing is mostly opaque and sales-led, which is the consistent buyer complaint — but emerging-market routing quality and WhatsApp implementation depth often justify the procurement effort.

Best for

Mid-market and enterprise buyers needing strong emerging-market SMS routing, deep WhatsApp implementation, or conversational-platform tooling layered on CPaaS APIs.

Worst for

Self-service dev teams wanting published per-message pricing and a free trial — Twilio, Plivo, or Telnyx all fit that pattern better.

Strengths

  • Strong global SMS routing especially in emerging markets
  • Deep WhatsApp Business Platform implementation
  • Multi-channel — SMS, voice, WhatsApp, Viber, RCS, Messenger
  • Conversational platform (Moments, Conversations) layered on top
  • Operates own routing infrastructure rather than aggregator-only
  • Strong India presence and DLT-handling expertise
  • Long-tenured (founded 2006) with stable product narrative

Weaknesses

  • Pricing mostly opaque and sales-led — no published self-service per-message rates
  • Procurement cycles materially longer than self-service vendors
  • Smaller US brand recognition than Twilio

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • SMS
    Custom per-message pricing; sales-led
    Quote
  • Voice
    Custom per-minute pricing
    Quote
  • WhatsApp Business
    Meta per-conversation + Infobip platform fee
    Quote
  • Conversations / Moments
    Conversational platform; custom pricing
    Quote
  • Enterprise multi-channel
    Custom enterprise contracts
    Quote
Watch for
  • · No published per-message pricing
  • · Procurement and onboarding cycles longer than self-service vendors
  • · WhatsApp pricing is Meta-set per-conversation

Key features

  • +SMS API global routing
  • +Voice API
  • +WhatsApp Business Platform (deep)
  • +Viber and Messenger channels
  • +RCS Business Messaging
  • +Moments customer-engagement platform
  • +Conversations omnichannel inbox
  • +Number provisioning across emerging markets
200+ integrations
SalesforceHubSpotMicrosoft DynamicsSAPOracleAdobe Experience Cloud
Geography
Global; strong emerging-market and EMEA coverage
#7

Telnyx

Network-first CPaaS; owns its private IP network for among the lowest published per-message and per-minute pricing.

Founded 2009 · Dublin, Ireland · private · 10–5,000 employees
G2 4.6 (220)
Capterra 4.6
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Telnyx

Telnyx is the network-first CPaaS, founded in 2009 and headquartered in Dublin, Ireland with US operations in Chicago. The differentiation is infrastructure ownership: rather than reselling carrier paths, Telnyx owns and operates its own private global IP network with direct interconnects to tier-1 carriers, which translates to among the lowest published per-message and per-minute pricing in the category — US SMS published at $0.004 per segment outbound versus Twilio at $0.0083. The trade is a younger and smaller vendor than Twilio or Sinch, narrower product surface (no Studio-equivalent flow builder, narrower WhatsApp depth), and a less-recognized brand in US enterprise procurement. For cost-driven dev teams comfortable with a more focused product, Telnyx delivers materially lower per-message economics.

Best for

Cost-driven developer teams sending high-volume US SMS or voice where the per-message and per-minute savings are material and the narrower product surface is acceptable.

Worst for

Risk-averse enterprise procurement that requires the deepest product surface or the largest brand-recognition vendor — Twilio or Sinch typically win on those criteria.

Strengths

  • Owns its own private global IP network — direct carrier interconnects
  • Among the lowest published per-message and per-minute pricing in the category
  • US SMS at $0.004 per segment versus Twilio at $0.0083 — roughly 50% lower
  • Strong developer documentation and SDK quality
  • Mission Control portal usable and clean
  • Voice quality benefits from direct-interconnect network model

Weaknesses

  • Younger and smaller vendor than Twilio or Sinch
  • Narrower product surface — no Studio-equivalent, narrower WhatsApp depth
  • Less brand recognition in US enterprise procurement
  • Smaller integration ecosystem

Pricing tiers

public
  • SMS US outbound
    $0.004 per outbound SMS segment (US)
    $0 /mo
  • SMS US inbound
    $0.0035 per inbound SMS segment (US)
    $0 /mo
  • Voice US outbound
    $0.0070 per minute outbound (US local)
    $0 /mo
  • Long-code number
    Per number per month
    $1 /mo
  • SIP trunking
    Per-minute SIP termination
    $0 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom volume contracts
    Quote
Watch for
  • · 10DLC TCR registration fees pass-through
  • · International SMS varies by destination
  • · WhatsApp pricing is Meta-set per-conversation

Key features

  • +SMS API
  • +Voice API
  • +SIP trunking on private IP network
  • +Number provisioning (US and international)
  • +Verify API
  • +Lookup API
  • +Mission Control portal
  • +Programmable voice with TeXML
60+ integrations
ZapierSalesforceHubSpotMicrosoft DynamicsAWSWebhook integrations
Geography
Global; strong US and EU coverage
#4

Bird (formerly MessageBird)

European CPaaS rebranding toward AI-first customer engagement after valuation reset.

Founded 2011 · Amsterdam, Netherlands · private · 20–10,000 employees
G2 4.0 (180)
Capterra 4.1
From $0 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Bird (formerly MessageBird)

MessageBird was Europe's most prominent CPaaS challenger, founded in Amsterdam in 2011 and growing aggressively through 2020-2021. The company closed a $1B Series C in April 2021 led by Spark Capital and Bonnier, valuing the business at $3.8B. By 2023, secondary-market valuations had reset to roughly $3.5B per reported transactions and the growth narrative softened. In 2024, MessageBird rebranded to Bird with an explicit strategic pivot toward AI-first customer engagement — repositioning from pure CPaaS infrastructure toward an AI-augmented customer-engagement platform layered on top of messaging APIs. The CPaaS APIs (SMS, voice, WhatsApp, email via the 2021 SparkPost acquisition) still ship, but existing customers should validate the new product roadmap at renewal and confirm pricing and feature commitments through the rebrand transition.

Best for

European buyers wanting EU-headquartered multi-channel CPaaS with EU data residency, comfortable with the AI-engagement strategic pivot.

Worst for

Buyers wanting pure long-term-stable CPaaS infrastructure — the AI-engagement rebrand is real and existing CPaaS roadmap commitments should be re-validated at contract renewal.

Strengths

  • European-headquartered CPaaS with EU data residency by default
  • Multi-channel — SMS, voice, WhatsApp, email (via SparkPost acquisition 2021)
  • Conversational platform with chatbot and inbox tooling
  • Strong global SMS routing especially across EMEA
  • Series C $1B raise (April 2021) was Europe's largest fintech-adjacent round at that time
  • Bird AI engagement layer reflects roadmap investment

Weaknesses

  • Series C closed at $1B valuation April 2021; secondary-market valuations reset to roughly $3.5B in 2023 — strategic stress real
  • Rebrand to Bird 2024 reflects pivot toward AI-engagement away from pure CPaaS infrastructure
  • Existing customers should validate new product roadmap at renewal
  • Pricing transparency softened during rebrand transition

Pricing tiers

partial
  • SMS API
    Per-segment pricing varies by destination
    $0 /mo
  • Voice API
    Per-minute pricing
    $0 /mo
  • WhatsApp Business
    Meta per-conversation + Bird platform fee
    $0 /mo
  • Email (SparkPost)
    Volume tiers; opaque enterprise pricing
    $0 /mo
  • Bird AI engagement platform
    Enterprise pricing; sales-led
    Quote
Watch for
  • · AI engagement platform pricing opaque
  • · WhatsApp pricing is Meta-set per-conversation
  • · 10DLC pass-through for US senders

Key features

  • +SMS API global routing
  • +Voice API
  • +WhatsApp Business Platform reseller
  • +Email via SparkPost (acquired 2021)
  • +Conversational Flow Builder
  • +Inbox for omnichannel support
  • +Chatbot and AI-engagement layer
  • +Number provisioning across countries
120+ integrations
SalesforceHubSpotShopifyZendeskMagentoSparkPost
Geography
Global; strong EMEA coverage
#2

Sinch

Largest CPaaS roll-up — SMS, voice, email all under one Swedish parent.

Founded 2008 · Stockholm, Sweden · public · 50–50,000 employees
G2 4.1 (240)
Capterra 4.2
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Sinch

Sinch (STO: SINCH) is the largest Twilio challenger by assembled scope, built through aggressive acquisition. The Swedish parent acquired ClickSend (Australian SMS) in 2021, Inteliquent (US voice carrier) for $1.14B in 2021, and Pathwire (Mailgun + Mailjet email) for $1.9B in 2021, then folded all of it under the Sinch brand. The combined portfolio offers SMS, voice, email, WhatsApp, and conversational APIs from a single parent, but integration is still visibly mid-flight — buyers commonly find that Mailgun and Mailjet operate as separate products with separate billing and support paths, and that ClickSend and Sinch core messaging remain on partially distinct platforms. The breadth is real; the integration friction is also real.

Best for

Buyers wanting a single Swedish-listed parent across SMS + voice + email + WhatsApp with carrier-of-record voice depth via Inteliquent.

Worst for

Buyers expecting a single integrated platform — acquired entities still operate with distinct billing, dashboards, and support; integration is mid-flight.

Strengths

  • Largest roll-up CPaaS portfolio — SMS, voice (Inteliquent), email (Mailgun, Mailjet)
  • Inteliquent US voice carrier provides carrier-of-record voice depth
  • Global SMS routing with strong carrier coverage in Europe and APAC
  • Public Swedish-listed parent — financial transparency (STO: SINCH)
  • WhatsApp Business Platform reseller with conversational API support
  • Per-message published pricing on most lanes

Weaknesses

  • Integration friction visible across acquired brands — Mailgun, Mailjet, ClickSend still distinct platforms
  • Stock price down significantly from 2021 peak, organizational stress evident in 2023-2024 review patterns
  • Support quality varies by which acquired entity owns the customer relationship

Pricing tiers

public
  • SMS US outbound
    Published per-segment pricing; volume tiers available
    $0 /mo
  • Voice (Inteliquent)
    Per-minute pricing with carrier-of-record routing
    $0 /mo
  • Email (Mailgun)
    Mailgun Foundation 50K $15/month
    $15 /mo
  • Email (Mailjet)
    Mailjet free tier + tiered subscriptions
    $0 /mo
  • WhatsApp Business
    Meta per-conversation + Sinch platform fee
    $0 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom multi-channel enterprise contracts
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Cross-product billing on Mailgun, Mailjet, ClickSend remains separate from core Sinch messaging
  • · 10DLC registration fees pass-through
  • · International SMS varies widely

Key features

  • +SMS (global routing)
  • +Voice via Inteliquent (US carrier-of-record)
  • +Email via Mailgun and Mailjet
  • +WhatsApp Business Platform
  • +Conversational APIs
  • +Number provisioning (long code, short code, toll-free)
  • +Verification API
  • +Customer engagement studio
200+ integrations
SalesforceHubSpotMicrosoft DynamicsZendeskMailgunMailjet
Geography
Global; strong in Europe, APAC, US
#5

Plivo

Developer-API SMS + voice with predictable pricing typically 20-30% below Twilio.

Founded 2011 · Austin, TX · private · 10–10,000 employees
G2 4.5 (280)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Plivo

Plivo is US-incorporated and India-engineered, founded in 2011 with engineering bases in Bangalore and Hyderabad. The product is a focused SMS + voice CPaaS with explicitly published per-message and per-minute pricing typically 20-30% below Twilio on equivalent US lanes — for example US SMS published at $0.0065 per segment versus Twilio at $0.0083, and US voice at $0.013 per minute versus Twilio at $0.014. The India-engineering footprint gives Plivo native routing and DLT-handling expertise for India-bound A2P SMS, which US-anchored vendors typically lack out of the box. Plivo deliberately stops short of the full Twilio product surface — no Studio-equivalent no-code flow builder, no Flex-equivalent contact center, narrower WhatsApp depth — in exchange for the simpler product and pricing.

Best for

Cost-conscious developer teams sending US SMS or voice at scale where Twilio's premium product surface is not required, and India-bound SMS where DLT handling matters.

Worst for

Buyers needing the deepest WhatsApp / RCS surface, contact-center bundling, or the broadest enterprise integration ecosystem — Twilio or Sinch typically win those.

Strengths

  • Published per-message and per-minute pricing typically 20-30% below Twilio
  • India-engineering footprint enables native TRAI DLT routing for India-bound SMS
  • Focused SMS + voice product without cross-sell pressure
  • CX Platform (Premium) adds contact-center features without separate billing complexity
  • Long-tenured (founded 2011) with stable product narrative
  • Strong developer documentation and SDK quality

Weaknesses

  • No Studio-equivalent no-code flow builder
  • Narrower WhatsApp Business depth than Twilio or Infobip
  • Smaller integration ecosystem than Twilio or Sinch
  • Less brand recognition in US enterprise procurement

Pricing tiers

public
  • SMS US outbound
    $0.0065 per outbound SMS segment (US)
    $0 /mo
  • SMS US inbound
    $0.0040 per inbound SMS segment (US)
    $0 /mo
  • Voice US outbound
    $0.013 per minute outbound (US local)
    $0 /mo
  • Long-code number
    Per number per month
    $0.8 /mo
  • Short code
    US short code rental starts at $995/month
    $995 /mo
  • CX Platform Premium
    Contact-center features; custom pricing
    Quote
Watch for
  • · 10DLC TCR registration fees pass-through
  • · India DLT scrubbing handled but registration is on the customer
  • · International SMS varies by destination

Key features

  • +SMS API (US, India, global)
  • +Voice API with PSTN and SIP
  • +Number provisioning (long code, short code, toll-free)
  • +Verify API
  • +Lookup API
  • +TRAI DLT scrubbing native (India-bound SMS)
  • +CX Platform Premium contact-center features
  • +Powerpack high-volume sender pools
80+ integrations
SalesforceHubSpotZendeskZapierMicrosoft DynamicsAWS
Geography
Global; strong US and India routing
#3

Vonage

Voice-anchored CPaaS folded into Ericsson Network APIs since 2022.

Founded 2001 · Holmdel, NJ · public · 50–25,000 employees
G2 4.3 (360)
Capterra 4.2
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Vonage

Vonage is the voice-anchored CPaaS with deepest history in the category, originating as a residential VoIP provider in 2001, then pivoting hard into CPaaS via the $230M Nexmo acquisition in 2016. Ericsson acquired Vonage for $6.2B in June 2022, folding the CPaaS business into Ericsson Network APIs / Global Network Platform — an ambitious telecom-grade play to expose carrier-network capabilities (quality-of-service APIs, device-location APIs, fraud-prevention APIs) to developers. The acquisition has introduced material roadmap uncertainty: Ericsson recorded a SEK 28B (~$2.7B) goodwill impairment on Vonage in Q3 2023, signaling the deal value was overpaid. Vonage product still ships, the developer APIs are still available, but the Ericsson Network APIs pivot remains in flight and buyers should re-validate roadmap commitments at renewal.

Best for

Voice-anchored mid-market and enterprise buyers comfortable with the Ericsson telecom-strategy pivot and wanting carrier-grade voice routing.

Worst for

New greenfield CPaaS projects where roadmap clarity matters — Twilio, Sinch, or Plivo carry less acquisition-era uncertainty.

Strengths

  • Voice-anchored history with carrier-grade global voice routing
  • SMS, voice, WhatsApp, Verify, and number insight APIs
  • Ericsson backing provides telecom-grade infrastructure access
  • Network APIs initiative exposes carrier QoS, location, fraud-detection capabilities
  • Strong global voice termination via Ericsson telco relationships
  • In Vonage Contact Center (formerly NewVoiceMedia) for CCaaS bundling

Weaknesses

  • Ericsson Q3 2023 SEK 28B goodwill impairment signals deal was overpaid
  • Roadmap uncertainty since acquisition; Ericsson Network APIs pivot still in flight
  • CPaaS narrative diluted by Ericsson telecom-strategy positioning
  • Stock private since Ericsson take-private; less financial transparency than NYSE peers

Pricing tiers

public
  • SMS US outbound
    Published per-segment pricing
    $0 /mo
  • Voice US outbound
    Per-minute outbound pricing
    $0 /mo
  • WhatsApp Business
    Meta per-conversation + Vonage platform fee
    $0 /mo
  • Verify API
    Per-verification pricing
    $0 /mo
  • Number Insight
    Per-lookup pricing
    $0 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom contracts; Contact Center bundle available
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Number rental priced separately per country
  • · 10DLC registration fees pass-through
  • · Network APIs pricing varies by carrier and capability

Key features

  • +SMS API global routing
  • +Voice API with carrier-grade termination
  • +WhatsApp Business Platform
  • +Verify (OTP and verification)
  • +Number Insight (lookup and validation)
  • +Vonage Video API (formerly TokBox)
  • +Vonage Contact Center (CCaaS)
  • +Ericsson Network APIs (QoS, location, fraud)
150+ integrations
SalesforceMicrosoft TeamsZendeskHubSpotServiceNowEricsson Network APIs
Geography
Global; strong voice termination via Ericsson telco relationships
#6

Bandwidth

US voice-first CPaaS with native E911 capabilities; carrier-of-record underneath many UCaaS platforms.

Founded 1999 · Raleigh, NC · public · 100–100,000 employees
G2 4.3 (180)
Capterra 4.4
From $0 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Bandwidth

Bandwidth (NASDAQ: BAND) is the US voice-anchored CPaaS that operates as a carrier of record — owning its own US tier-1 voice network and providing the underlying carrier services that many UCaaS platforms (RingCentral, Zoom Phone, Microsoft Teams Operator Connect) consume. Founded in 1999 in Raleigh, NC and public on NASDAQ since 2017, Bandwidth's differentiation is voice depth: native E911 (Enhanced 911 emergency services) capabilities, US number portability, SIP trunking, and toll-free origination. SMS is a real product but secondary; messaging-first CPaaS buyers typically default to Twilio or Plivo, while voice-first US enterprise buyers default to Bandwidth. The company has faced executive turnover and a class-action settlement on data-breach disclosure timing — both worth diligence at procurement.

Best for

US voice-anchored enterprise buyers with 911/E911 compliance requirements, SIP-trunking needs, or UCaaS platforms requiring carrier-of-record voice termination.

Worst for

Global multi-channel CPaaS buyers — Twilio, Sinch, or Infobip cover SMS, WhatsApp, RCS across more geographies.

Strengths

  • US tier-1 voice carrier of record — not a reseller
  • Native E911 capabilities (Enhanced 911 emergency services)
  • Powers UCaaS platforms underneath (Microsoft Teams Operator Connect, RingCentral, Zoom Phone)
  • Public-company financial transparency (NASDAQ: BAND)
  • Number portability and toll-free origination
  • 25+ years US telecom infrastructure heritage

Weaknesses

  • SMS product secondary to voice — messaging-first buyers typically pick Twilio or Plivo
  • Executive turnover through 2023-2024
  • Data-breach class-action settlement 2024 (~$5M) related to disclosure timing
  • Global SMS coverage narrower than Twilio or Sinch

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Voice US outbound
    Per-minute carrier-of-record voice pricing
    $0 /mo
  • SIP trunking
    Volume-based per-minute pricing
    $0 /mo
  • SMS US outbound
    Per-segment US SMS pricing
    $0 /mo
  • E911 service
    Per-number E911 service fee
    $0 /mo
  • Toll-free number
    Per-number monthly + per-minute origination
    $0 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom enterprise contracts; UCaaS platform pricing
    Quote
Watch for
  • · E911 service fees per number
  • · Number portability fees
  • · Compliance and regulatory fees pass-through
  • · Enterprise pricing fully opaque

Key features

  • +Carrier-of-record voice
  • +SIP trunking
  • +E911 (Enhanced 911 emergency services)
  • +Number portability
  • +Toll-free origination
  • +Voice API
  • +SMS API (US-primary)
  • +UCaaS platform operator-connect
80+ integrations
Microsoft Teams Operator ConnectZoom PhoneRingCentralFive9GenesysCisco Webex
Geography
US-primary; global voice termination expanding
#9

Kaleyra (Tata Communications)

Italian-origin CPaaS now under Tata Communications; bundled SMS + voice + WhatsApp + bot tooling.

Founded 1999 · Milan, Italy · public · 50–25,000 employees
G2 4.3 (120)
Capterra 4.3
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Kaleyra (Tata Communications)

Kaleyra is the Italian-origin CPaaS founded in 1999 as Solutions Infini, restructured as Kaleyra following the 2018 merger with the Hong Kong-listed Buongiorno spin-off, and acquired by Tata Communications in June 2024 for ~$100M after taking the business private. The product is a bundled CPaaS with SMS, voice, WhatsApp Business, push, and a bot/conversational layer on top — with strongest market presence in Italy and India (legacy Solutions Infini India business). The Tata acquisition anchors Kaleyra inside a major Indian-headquartered global telecom group, which materially improves carrier relationships and India-bound routing capacity, but the integration is still mid-flight and customers should validate roadmap and pricing commitments through the transition.

Best for

Mid-market and enterprise buyers needing strong India and Italy presence with Tata Communications carrier backing, particularly for India-bound A2P traffic.

Worst for

Self-service dev teams wanting published per-message pricing and a free trial — Plivo or Telnyx fit that pattern better.

Strengths

  • Bundled SMS + voice + WhatsApp + bot tooling on one platform
  • Tata Communications backing improves carrier relationships globally
  • Strong India routing (legacy Solutions Infini heritage)
  • Strong Italy market presence
  • Conversational and chatbot tooling layered on CPaaS APIs
  • 25-year telecom heritage in India and Italy

Weaknesses

  • Tata acquisition completed June 2024; integration still mid-flight
  • Pricing largely opaque — sales-led
  • US brand recognition narrow vs Twilio
  • Public-company financial transparency lost after take-private

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • SMS
    Custom per-message pricing; sales-led
    Quote
  • Voice
    Custom per-minute pricing
    Quote
  • WhatsApp Business
    Meta per-conversation + Kaleyra platform fee
    Quote
  • Push notifications
    Custom pricing
    Quote
  • Enterprise multi-channel
    Custom enterprise contracts
    Quote
Watch for
  • · No published per-message pricing
  • · India DLT scrubbing included but registration is on the customer
  • · Procurement cycles longer than self-service vendors

Key features

  • +SMS API global routing
  • +Voice API
  • +WhatsApp Business Platform
  • +Push notifications
  • +Email API (limited)
  • +Bot and conversational layer
  • +Tata Communications carrier backing
  • +India DLT scrubbing native
80+ integrations
SalesforceHubSpotMicrosoft DynamicsZohoFreshworksTata Communications products
Geography
Global; strong India and Italy
#10

Tanla (Karix)

Indian-origin CPaaS controlling a meaningful share of India A2P SMS volume.

Founded 1999 · Hyderabad, India · public · 100–100,000 employees
G2 4.3 (80)
Capterra 4.4
From $0 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Tanla (Karix)

Tanla Platforms (NSE/BSE: TANLA) is the Indian-origin CPaaS founded in Hyderabad in 1999 and listed on Indian exchanges. The business controls a meaningful share of Indian A2P SMS volume routed through Indian operator networks (Vodafone Idea, Airtel, Jio, BSNL), powered by the proprietary Trubloq blockchain-anchored DLT-routing platform that scrubs SMS templates and senders against TRAI DLT registrations natively. Karix Mobile, the legacy India CPaaS business previously owned by GSO Capital and earlier by Globe Telecom, was acquired by Tanla in 2021 — consolidating the largest Indian A2P SMS positions under one roof. For India-bound A2P SMS at carrier-grade volume, Tanla and Karix are the default Indian-origin choices; for international traffic, US-anchored vendors typically still win on global routing breadth.

Best for

India-bound A2P SMS at carrier-grade volume requiring Trubloq DLT-routing depth and direct Indian operator relationships.

Worst for

Global multi-channel CPaaS buyers needing strong US, EU, and emerging-market non-India coverage — Twilio, Sinch, or Infobip win those.

Strengths

  • Controls a meaningful share of Indian A2P SMS volume routed through Indian operators
  • Trubloq blockchain-anchored DLT-routing platform — TRAI DLT scrubbing native
  • NSE/BSE-listed (TANLA) — public-company financial transparency
  • Karix Mobile acquisition (2021) consolidated Indian CPaaS positions
  • Strong relationships with Indian carriers (Vodafone Idea, Airtel, Jio, BSNL)
  • WhatsApp Business and email channels added through portfolio expansion

Weaknesses

  • International coverage narrower than Twilio, Sinch, or Infobip
  • Brand recognition outside India limited
  • Pricing largely opaque and sales-led for non-India volume
  • Stock has been volatile with regulatory and competitive pressures on Indian A2P SMS pricing

Pricing tiers

partial
  • India A2P SMS
    Per-segment INR pricing for India-bound A2P; carrier pass-through
    $0 /mo
  • International SMS
    Custom pricing by destination
    Quote
  • WhatsApp Business
    Meta per-conversation + Tanla platform fee
    Quote
  • Trubloq DLT routing
    Included with India A2P SMS
    $0 /mo
  • Enterprise multi-channel
    Custom enterprise contracts
    Quote
Watch for
  • · TRAI DLT registration is on the customer; Tanla handles scrubbing
  • · India carrier pass-through varies by operator
  • · International pricing opaque

Key features

  • +India A2P SMS at carrier-grade volume
  • +Trubloq blockchain-anchored DLT-routing platform
  • +TRAI DLT scrubbing native
  • +Direct Indian operator relationships
  • +WhatsApp Business Platform
  • +Voice API (India-primary)
  • +RCS Business Messaging
  • +Email API (via Karix portfolio)
60+ integrations
SalesforceIndian banking systemsIndian government messagingMicrosoft DynamicsZohoFreshworks
Geography
India-primary; international expanding

Frequently asked questions

The questions buyers actually ask before they sign.

Twilio vs Infobip vs Telnyx for French firms?
Twilio if the deepest CPaaS product surface matters and EU data residency is sufficient (Twilio operates EU regions). Infobip if deep WhatsApp Business implementation and conversational platform tooling matter. Telnyx if cost-led per-message pricing on its owned EU network is the deciding factor. Most French SMB firms in 2026 default to Twilio for product depth or Sinch via Mailjet for Paris-built EU-resident multi-channel. Enterprise French firms with strong WhatsApp needs typically pick Infobip.
How does CNIL enforce RGPD on French CPaaS messaging?
CNIL enforcement on pure transactional CPaaS (OTP, appointment reminders) is rare; CNIL focus is on B2C marketing SMS and tracking. The risk areas for French CPaaS users: commercial content (upsells, cross-sells) embedded in transactional triggers RGPD marketing rules and LCEN opt-in requirements; phone-number processing without lawful basis; CLI mismatches and number-spoofing. CNIL fines on phone-number mishandling have increased 2024-2026. French firms should keep transactional templates strictly functional or obtain marketing consent for mixed content.
Why do French public-sector firms choose OVHcloud SMS over global CPaaS?
OVHcloud SMS (Roubaix-based) provides French sovereign-cloud SMS infrastructure with full French data residency, French-only operator routing, and Olive Tree / European Sovereign Cloud alignment. For French public-sector, defense, and certain regulated-industry deployments, OVHcloud SMS is preferred over global CPaaS vendors that operate EU regions but are US-headquartered. The trade is narrower product surface (no WhatsApp depth, narrower voice) — French sovereign deployments typically run a French SMS specialist alongside a global CPaaS for non-sovereign workloads.
What is the difference between a CPaaS messaging API and an SMS marketing platform?
CPaaS messaging APIs (Twilio, Sinch, Plivo, Telnyx) are developer-facing infrastructure: HTTP APIs to send a single SMS, voice call, or WhatsApp message, billed per message or per minute, with no campaign UI, no subscriber list management, and no segmentation builder. SMS marketing platforms (Attentive, Klaviyo SMS, Postscript) abstract that layer with a subscriber-list-and-campaign UI built for marketing teams — they typically run on top of Twilio, Sinch, or similar CPaaS plumbing underneath. The decision is clear: if a marketer is sending campaigns to opted-in lists, use an SMS marketing platform; if a developer is sending OTPs, appointment reminders, or programmatic notifications from a product, use a CPaaS.
Why is Twilio rarely the cheapest CPaaS but still the most-recommended one?
Twilio is rarely the cheapest CPaaS at per-message unit cost — published US SMS is around $0.0083 per segment outbound versus Plivo at $0.0065 and Telnyx at $0.004 — but Twilio maintains the deepest product surface in the category. Studio no-code flow builder, Verify OTP product, Voice Insights, Lookup number validation, Conversations cross-channel threading, and Flex contact-center-as-a-service have no direct equivalents at most challengers. The Twilio premium is real and the buyer's decision is feature-depth vs unit-cost: high-volume cost-driven buyers pick Plivo or Telnyx; multi-channel feature-driven buyers pick Twilio.
What happened to MessageBird, and is the Bird rebrand worth concern?
MessageBird closed its Series C at a $1B raise in April 2021, led by Spark Capital and Bonnier, valuing the business at $3.8B. By 2023, secondary-market valuations had reset to roughly $3.5B per reported transactions and growth softened. In 2024, MessageBird rebranded to Bird with an explicit strategic pivot toward AI-first customer engagement — repositioning from pure CPaaS infrastructure toward an AI-augmented customer-engagement platform. The CPaaS APIs (SMS, voice, WhatsApp, email via the 2021 SparkPost acquisition) still ship, but existing customers should validate the new product roadmap at renewal and confirm pricing and feature commitments through the rebrand transition. For greenfield CPaaS buyers in 2026, Bird is a credible European option but Twilio, Sinch, and Infobip carry less strategic-pivot risk.
How does Sinch integrate ClickSend, Inteliquent, and Pathwire/Mailgun?
Sinch acquired ClickSend (Australian SMS) in 2021, Inteliquent (US voice carrier) for $1.14B in 2021, and Pathwire (Mailgun + Mailjet email) for $1.9B in 2021. The acquired entities are integrated under the Sinch parent brand but operationally still distinct: Mailgun and Mailjet operate as separate products with separate billing, dashboards, and support paths from core Sinch messaging; ClickSend and Sinch core messaging remain on partially distinct platforms. The breadth of the combined portfolio is real (SMS, voice, email, WhatsApp under one parent) but buyers should expect integration friction at the edges, separate logins per acquired product, and support quality varying by which acquired entity owns the customer relationship.
What is US A2P 10DLC and how does it affect CPaaS onboarding?
A2P 10DLC (Application-to-Person 10-Digit Long Code) is the US-carrier-mandated registration framework for all A2P SMS sent on standard 10-digit long-code numbers, enforced since 2023. Onboarding requires registration with The Campaign Registry (TCR) at the brand level (EIN-verified, optional external vetting for trust scores) and at the campaign level (use-case classification, sample messages, opt-in confirmation language). Per-segment carrier surcharges apply on top of the CPaaS provider's per-message fee, varying by vetting score. All CPaaS providers in this list support 10DLC registration, but the onboarding step adds 5-15 business days for the first sender and is a real friction for new US SMS senders. Toll-free numbers and short codes have separate, more involved registration paths.
How does WhatsApp Business Platform pricing work across CPaaS providers?
WhatsApp Business Platform pricing is set globally by Meta on a per-conversation basis (a conversation is a 24-hour messaging session initiated by a user-initiated message or by a business-initiated template), priced differently by country and conversation category (utility, authentication, marketing, service). CPaaS providers (Twilio, Sinch, Infobip, Bird, Vonage, Plivo, Tanla) resell at modest markup but cannot undercut Meta's published rates. The CPaaS differentiator on WhatsApp is implementation depth — template management, media handling, conversation routing — not unit cost. Infobip, Twilio, and Bird have the deepest WhatsApp implementations; Plivo, Telnyx, Bandwidth, and Vonage have narrower depth.
How is India A2P SMS different from US A2P SMS, and what is DLT?
Indian A2P SMS requires TRAI DLT (Distributed Ledger Technology) registration of templates, sender IDs (also called header), and scrubbing path through operator portals (Vodafone Idea, Airtel, Jio, BSNL). Every SMS template — promotional, transactional, service — must be pre-registered with content templates and matched at send time; non-matching templates are scrubbed at the operator. This is a non-trivial onboarding step on every CPaaS provider. Vendors with prior India-traffic experience (Karix/Tanla via Trubloq, Plivo via India-engineering, Infobip, Kaleyra/Tata) handle DLT routinely; US-anchored vendors (Twilio, Bandwidth, Telnyx) support DLT but require more setup support and operator-by-operator nuance. For India-bound A2P SMS at carrier-grade volume, Indian-origin vendors (Tanla, Karix, Kaleyra/Tata) typically have direct operator relationships that US-anchored vendors lack.
When should I pick a voice-first CPaaS versus a multi-channel CPaaS?
Voice-first CPaaS (Bandwidth, Vonage) wins when voice quality, E911 emergency-services compliance, SIP trunking, or UCaaS-platform carrier-of-record requirements dominate the buying decision. Bandwidth operates its own US tier-1 voice network and powers the underlying carrier services for RingCentral, Zoom Phone, and Microsoft Teams Operator Connect. Multi-channel CPaaS (Twilio, Sinch, Infobip, Bird) wins when SMS, WhatsApp, RCS, and conversational messaging dominate the mix — voice is supported but is one of several channels. The decision is rarely close: a US enterprise replacing a legacy PBX picks Bandwidth or Vonage; a SaaS product sending OTPs and notifications picks Twilio, Plivo, or Telnyx.

Final word

Looking at a different market? See the global Customer Messaging Infrastructure ranking, or pick another country at the top of this page.

Last updated 2026-05-23. Local pricing reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.