Hardware is the part of VoIP buying that most vendors either oversell or ignore entirely. Here is the honest breakdown: when you need new phones, when you don't, which brands matter, and how hardware pricing really works.
This is the question most organizations skip, and it costs them money. Every major UCaaS platform ships with a softphone app for desktop and mobile. For a significant percentage of the workforce (remote employees, laptop-first teams, knowledge workers), a softphone plus a USB headset is a complete phone solution with no desk phone required.
That said, desk phones are still the right call in specific situations. Receptionists, shared spaces, conference rooms, manufacturing floors, warehouses, and anyone who spends most of their workday on calls will have a better experience with purpose-built hardware.
The mistake is buying hardware for everyone when only some people actually need it. A 50-person company might genuinely need 10 desk phones and 40 softphone setups. Vendors won't tell you that.
Some providers include hardware, or a hardware credit, in their per-seat pricing. This typically means you're getting a mid-range phone (often Yealink T4 series or a Poly VVX equivalent) factored into the monthly fee. Convenient, but you usually have less flexibility on model choice, and you're essentially renting the hardware rather than owning it.
Most enterprise deployments handle hardware separately, buying or leasing phones independently from the service contract. This gives you full control over model selection, quantity, and timing. You can also buy refurbished phones at significant savings. Hardware purchased separately is typically owned outright, which matters at contract renewal.
For fully remote teams or laptop-first organizations, hardware costs can be zero. The employee uses a softphone app on their existing device plus a USB or Bluetooth headset. This is increasingly common and works well. The main consideration is headset quality, which directly affects call audio.
We always start by asking how many employees actually need physical phones, then model whether bundled or separate hardware is cheaper over the contract term. For most mid-market deployments, buying phones separately gives better flexibility and lower total cost. For smaller organizations that want simplicity, bundled hardware programs can make sense. We'll run the numbers for your specific situation.
Often yes, with caveats. Most modern VoIP desk phones are SIP-based and can be provisioned to work with a new UCaaS platform. But the answer depends on three things:
The dominant brand in cloud UCaaS deployments. Yealink phones are certified by virtually every major UCaaS provider, manufactured to a high standard, and priced competitively. The T4 series (T41S through T58A) covers the full range from basic to executive, and the T5 series adds color touchscreens and expanded line keys. If you're buying new phones for a UCaaS deployment, Yealink is the default recommendation for most use cases.
| Model | Best for | Est. street price |
|---|---|---|
| T31P | Basic / entry-level users | $55–75 |
| T41S | Standard office user, 6 lines | $80–110 |
| T46U | Power user, 16 lines, USB | $120–155 |
| T57W | Executive, 29 lines, WiFi, Bluetooth | $160–200 |
| T58A | Executive, touchscreen, video-ready | $200–260 |
| CP960 | Conference room, 360° mic array | $340–420 |
Polycom became Poly after merging with Plantronics, and now operates under HP after HP's 2022 acquisition. The brand remains the gold standard for conference room audio. The Poly Studio and SoundStation conference phones are widely regarded as the best conference room devices available. The VVX desk phone series is solid and widely certified, though Yealink has largely overtaken it on price-to-value for new deployments. Poly/Plantronics headsets are excellent and widely used in contact center environments.
| Model | Best for | Est. street price |
|---|---|---|
| VVX 250 | Standard office, 4 lines | $90–120 |
| VVX 450 | Power user, 12 lines, USB | $140–180 |
| Edge E400 | Mid-range open SIP, color display | $130–170 |
| SoundStation IP 6000 | Small–medium conference rooms | $350–440 |
| SoundStation IP 7000 | Large conference rooms, expandable | $480–580 |
| Studio X30 | Video + audio conference room system | $700–900 |
Cisco phones are the standard in Cisco Unified Communications Manager (CUCM) environments. The 8800 and 9800 series run standard SIP firmware and can be provisioned for most UCaaS platforms. Cisco phones are well-built and carry a premium price. If your environment isn't Cisco-native, there's usually no compelling reason to choose Cisco phones over Yealink or Poly at comparable specs for meaningfully less cost.
| Model | Best for | Est. street price |
|---|---|---|
| 8811 | Standard user, 5 lines, grayscale | $130–165 |
| 8841 | Standard user, 5 lines, color display | $160–200 |
| 8865 | Executive, 5 lines, WiFi, video-ready | $260–320 |
| 9841 | Next-gen standard, color, USB-C | $180–230 |
| 7832 | Conference room, SIP conference phone | $300–380 |
Grandstream is the value brand in the business VoIP hardware space. Their phones are SIP-standard, widely compatible, and priced 20–30% below comparable Yealink models. Build quality and UX are a step behind Yealink, but Grandstream is a reasonable choice for high-quantity deployments where budget matters more than polish: entry-level users, hot desk stations, or organizations equipping a large number of basic users.
For softphone users, which is an increasing share of the workforce, the headset is effectively the phone. Call quality on the far end is almost entirely determined by the microphone quality of the headset the caller is using, not by the platform or carrier. A $30 consumer earbud will sound noticeably worse than a $90 business headset on a professional call.
For contact center agents, this matters even more. Agents wearing headsets for 6–8 hours a day need noise cancellation, comfort, and reliability.
Every quote from Bridgepointe includes a hardware recommendation: how many phones you actually need, which models, and whether reusing existing hardware makes sense for your deployment.