Cloud PBX vs Traditional PBX in Australia: a 2026 Decision Guide
With ISDN switched off and NBN universal, every Australian business needs to choose a phone system. A side-by-side comparison of cloud PBX vs on-prem PBX in 2026.
The Australian context: ISDN is gone
Telstra completed ISDN switch-off, and the NBN is now the only realistic underlay for business voice in Australia. That single fact has retired traditional on-prem PBXes for most SMEs — but the question isn't fully closed for every business. Here's how to choose.
Side-by-side comparison
| Dimension | Cloud (hosted) PBX | Traditional on-prem PBX |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront capex | Low (softphones, optional hardphones) | High (PBX server, licences, install) |
| Monthly opex | Per-user, predictable | Carrier fees + maintenance contract |
| Scaling | Add a user in minutes | Quote, licence, configure |
| Remote work | Native (softphone + mobile) | Requires VPN / SBC |
| Resilience | Carrier-grade, multi-region | Single site = single point of failure |
| Best for | 95% of Australian SMEs | Niche on-prem requirements |
When traditional still wins
- Air-gapped sites (mining, defence) with no internet
- Heavy DECT estates already in place and depreciating
- Specialised CTI integrations locked to specific PBX hardware
For everyone else — cloud wins.
What "good" looks like for an Australian cloud PBX
- +61 DIDs in every state capital (Sydney 02, Melbourne 03, Brisbane 07, Perth 08, Adelaide 08)
- 1300 / 1800 numbers with state-of-origin routing
- Mobile + desktop softphones (iOS, Android, macOS, Windows)
- ACMA-licensed underlay carriers
- CRM integrations out of the box
Pricing snapshot
See Australia hosted PBX for live plans in AUD.
FAQ
Can I keep my 1300 / 1800 number? Yes — full number portability is standard.
What about 000 emergency calling? Compliant with ACMA's emergency call handling requirements; address-based emergency routing configurable per user.
Get started
Reach our Australia team for a free phone-system audit and migration plan.
