P2P Voice
Private one‑to‑one calling and messaging.
Status
P2P voice is temporarily unavailable while we complete carrier and policy reviews. The target experience is private, respectful one‑to‑one calling with simple controls and practical safeguards.
Designed for personal use
P2P is for conversations with people you already know — friends, family, and small groups. It’s built for direct, human communication, not campaigns or outreach. If you need customer notifications or any kind of broadcast, use our A2P service instead.
Not for business or bulk
P2P cannot be used for business communication, marketing, support hotlines, political campaigns, recruitment, surveys, or any bulk messaging. Robocalls and auto‑dialers are not allowed. Traffic must remain personal.
Usage rules
Conversations are expected to be 1:1. A tiny fan‑out is acceptable for personal use (for example, one person reaching up to three contacts in a short window) — anything larger belongs in A2P. Only contact people who know you; do not use purchased lists.
Prohibited content
Sexually explicit content, adult services, sexual exploitation, or any sexually oriented material is strictly prohibited on P2P. Content that is illegal, harmful, harassing, or exploitative is also forbidden. Violations may result in immediate account termination.
Monitoring and safety
We apply strong monitoring to protect users: conservative rate limits, spam‑detection signals, and tools to block or report abuse. Accounts that violate policy may be paused or closed. We don’t record calls by default; limited metadata is kept to run the service and enforce these rules.
Availability
We’ll re‑enable signups after carrier reviews and policy checks are complete. If you have a timeline or need confirmation on a specific use case, contact Support for a quick review.
Contact
Have a use case or integration question? Send a quick note and we’ll follow up with details.
Nothing on this page constitutes legal advice. It is provided for general informational purposes only and may not reflect the latest regulatory changes. You should consult your own legal counsel to determine the obligations that apply to your specific use case and jurisdiction.