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If you're still paying for a landline, the numbers don't add up. A basic 10-line PBX in New Zealand runs 200–400/month for a system that breaks when one person works from home. Cloud phone systems — VoIP — deliver the same calls, plus mobile apps, voicemail-to-email, and CRM integration, for 20–35 per user per month (USD).

The catch: most of the big US names haven't bothered to explain what works in NZ. Some have local calling support here, some don't. Pricing is in USD. And a handful of NZ-specific providers offer flat-rate plans that beat the per-seat model for larger teams.

Here's what actually works for NZ small businesses in 2026 — including one strong local option the global review sites never mention.

What to look for in a cloud phone system for NZ

Before comparing platforms, get clear on four things:


The options compared

Provider Plan USD/user/month NZD approx NZ numbers Unlimited NZ calling
Dialpad Standard $15 (annual) ~NZ$26
Zoom Phone US & Canada Unlimited $15 (annual) ~NZ$26 Metered international
RingCentral Core $20 (annual) ~NZ$34
Aircall Essentials Request quote Unlimited inbound
Sharp 3CX NZ Flat plan ~NZ$295+GST/month NZ$339 (whole team)

NZD conversions based on USD/NZD rate of ~0.584 (June 2026). Prices may differ with NZ billing.


Dialpad — best AI features for the price

Dialpad starts at US15/user/month(annualbilling), whichputsitatroughlyNZ26/user/month. What sets it apart from Zoom Phone at the same price point: AI call transcription and voicemail-to-text are included on the Standard plan, not locked behind an upgrade.

The Kordia partnership means Dialpad has genuine NZ SIP routing — your callers won't hear the Pacific lag you sometimes get with US-hosted VoIP. NZ local numbers are available.

Xero, Vend, and TradeMe are all Dialpad customers, so it's proven in the local market.

Limitations. The Standard plan caps you at one office location and has limited reporting. Integrations beyond HubSpot and Google Workspace require the Pro plan (US25/user/monthNZ43). No free trial in NZ by default — request a demo.

Best for: Fast-growing NZ startups that want AI call features without paying enterprise rates.


RingCentral — most integrations, highest price

RingCentral is the market leader globally with 500,000+ business customers. The Core plan at US20/user/monthNZ34) covers unlimited NZ calling, voicemail-to-text, auto-attendant, and video meetings up to 100 participants.

Where it earns its premium: 300+ integrations, including native Salesforce, Google Workspace, Microsoft Teams, Slack, and Zendesk connectors. If your sales team lives in Salesforce, RingCentral's embedded calling is seamless in a way Dialpad's isn't on a base plan.

The catch: mandatory regulatory fees and add-ons (AI Receptionist, toll-free numbers, SMS over 25 messages/user/month) routinely push actual bills 50–125% above the advertised rate. A 10-person team on the Core plan expecting NZ340/monthtotalwilllikelyseeNZ450–$550 once fees land.

Best for: Established NZ businesses already using Salesforce or Microsoft 365, where deep integration justifies the cost.


Zoom Phone — cheapest entry, but NZ calling is metered

Zoom Phone at US15/user/monthisthecheapeststandaloneVoIPplanworthconsidering.IfyourteamisalreadypayingforZoomforvideomeetings, bundlingZoomPhoneintoaWorkplacepackage(fromUS18.33/user/month) makes sense — you cut one subscription and get a unified interface.

The key caveat for NZ: the US$15 plan gives you unlimited US and Canada calling only. International calls to NZ landlines and mobiles are metered — you pay per minute. If you're an NZ-based team using Zoom Phone to call local customers, you'll need to verify outbound NZ rates, which Zoom doesn't prominently advertise.

For teams that want NZ unlimited calling from Zoom, you'd need the Global Select plan (price on request), which changes the economics significantly.

Warning

Zoom Phone's base plan (US$15/user/month) does not include unlimited NZ calling. Outbound calls to NZ landlines/mobiles are per-minute. Confirm pricing via Zoom's NZ sales team before committing.

Best for: Teams that already pay for Zoom Workplace and want to consolidate by adding phone for a small uplift.


Aircall — strong CRM integrations, pricing opaque

Aircall positions itself as the phone system for customer-facing teams — support desks, sales teams, and anyone who lives in HubSpot or Salesforce. It has 250+ integrations on every plan (Essentials and up), which beats RingCentral for base-tier accessibility.

The frustrating bit: Aircall no longer publishes pricing on its website. Earlier 2026 sources put the Essentials plan at around US$30/user/month with a 3-user minimum, which lands higher than RingCentral on paper. Professional tier (required for Salesforce CTI, advanced analytics, and smart routing) runs higher again.

For NZ businesses, Aircall does support local NZ numbers and has Auckland-based customers. The 7-day free trial is available.

Best for: Small NZ support or sales teams (3–15 people) where CRM integration is the primary driver.

Try Aircall free for 7 days


Sharp NZ 3CX — flat rate, NZ data centres, no per-user fees

Every option above charges per user per month. Sharp NZ is the exception: it runs 3CX (one of the most-used enterprise PBX platforms globally) on its own New Zealand data centres, and charges a flat monthly rate starting at NZ295/month + GST(NZ339 all up) for up to 16 users.

For a 10-person office, that's NZ33.90/user/monthcompetitivewithRingCentral.Fora16 − personteam, itdropstoNZ21/user/month. Add your 17th person and the price doesn't change.

Sharp is one of the largest 3CX partners in NZ, uses the system internally, and provides NZ-based support with a claimed 30-second response time. Hardware (desk phones, headsets) is bundled via an in-house financing option with no upfront cost.

The trade-off: 3CX is a traditional PBX platform. AI transcription and native CRM integrations require more configuration than Dialpad or Aircall out of the box.

Tip

Sharp NZ offers a free phone bill analysis — send your current landline bill and they'll produce a cost comparison within 2 business days. Worth doing before committing to any per-user plan.

Best for: NZ businesses with 10+ staff, or those expecting to grow, where the flat rate maths make sense and NZ-based support matters.

Get a quote from Sharp NZ


Verdict: which one should you pick?

Under 10 staff, fully remote: Dialpad Standard at NZ$26/user/month. NZ local numbers, real AI features on the base plan, and Kordia-backed local routing.

10–20 staff, mostly in-office: Run the Sharp NZ numbers first. A 15-person office pays NZ$22.60/user/month on the flat plan, with NZ support included. If your CRM integration requirements are simple, this will be cheaper and simpler than any US-based option.

Using Salesforce or Microsoft 365 enterprise integrations: RingCentral Advanced (US25/user/monthNZ43). The integration depth is worth the premium if you're already invested in those platforms.

Already paying for Zoom Workplace: Add Zoom Phone via a bundle, but get NZ outbound calling costs confirmed in writing before switching.

Customer support or sales team, HubSpot-first: Aircall Essentials. The CRM integration quality on the base plan outperforms everything else here for teams that live inside HubSpot.

Explore Dialpad for NZ teams | Try Aircall free | Get RingCentral pricing

TD
Toby Downs is an independent tech writer based in New Zealand, covering SaaS, AI tools, and business software for tpdowns.com. No paid placements, no sponsored opinions — just research.