Every VoIP provider quotes a per-seat price. What shows up on the bill is higher. Here is what the additional charges actually are, why they exist, how much they typically add up to, and why they vary so much from one organization to the next.
If a provider quotes you $20 per seat per month, your actual invoice will land somewhere between $23 and $26 per seat once taxes, E911 fees, and regulatory recovery charges are added. In some high-tax states and cities, it can go higher.
This is not a VoIP-specific problem. These charges exist because VoIP providers are classified as telecommunications services and are subject to the same regulatory fee frameworks that apply to traditional phone carriers. The fees are largely pass-throughs from the government to the provider to you.
The problem is that most vendors lead with the base price and bury the fee detail in the contract. A Bridgepointe advisor always shows you total cost of ownership before you sign, not after.
Four categories of charges show up on virtually every VoIP bill. Here is what each one means.
A federal program that funds broadband access in rural areas, school and library connectivity (E-Rate), and Lifeline subsidies for low-income households. VoIP providers contribute a percentage of their interstate revenue to USF and pass this cost through to customers. The contribution factor changes quarterly and is set by the FCC.
A 3% federal excise tax on local telephone service. Whether it applies to VoIP depends on how a provider classifies their service. Some providers classify their VoIP as a non-taxable information service to avoid this charge. Others are classified as local telephone service and collect it. Ask your provider directly.
This one is not a tax. It is a fee the provider invented to recover their own regulatory compliance costs, like FCC filing fees, number administration, and E911 infrastructure. The name, structure, and amount vary entirely by provider. Some bundle it into one line item, others break it into several. It is legitimate but also where providers have the most flexibility.
Funds the infrastructure that routes 911 calls to the correct Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) and provides location data to dispatchers. Collected at both the federal and state level. The rate varies by state and sometimes by county. Remote workers in multiple states can each trigger different E911 fees based on their registered service address.
Most states impose their own telecommunications taxes on VoIP services, though the rate and exact applicability varies significantly. Some states tax VoIP at the same rate as traditional telephone service. Others have lower rates or exemptions. A few states do not tax VoIP at all. This is the single biggest driver of variance across different organizations' bills.
Some cities and counties impose their own telecom taxes on top of state taxes. Chicago, New York City, and Los Angeles are well-known examples with notably high local telecom tax rates. These apply based on the billing address or, in some cases, the registered location of each user. Multi-state organizations can end up with significantly different per-seat costs by location.
Many states run their own Universal Service programs in addition to the federal USF, funding in-state broadband and telecom access programs. Not all states have these, and the rates where they do exist range from negligible to meaningful. Often lumped into a single "state surcharges" line on the bill.
Covers the provider's cost of participating in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) administration, number portability databases, and CNAM (Caller ID Name) lookup infrastructure. Usually small but consistently present on most VoIP bills. Sometimes bundled into the regulatory recovery fee.
This example uses a mid-tax market (Texas). The same 25-seat account in Chicago would look meaningfully different.
Illustrative example. Actual rates vary by provider, state, and quarter. USF rates change every 90 days.
Same provider, same plan, same base price per seat. The effective tax and fee rate varies significantly based on where your users are located or registered.
| State / City | Notes on local VoIP tax environment | Approx. total fee load on top of base |
|---|---|---|
| Oregon | No state sales tax; lower overall telecom tax burden | +12–15% |
| Montana | No state sales tax; minimal local telecom fees | +11–14% |
| New Hampshire | No general sales tax; telecom subject to Communications Services Tax | +13–16% |
| Florida | State sales tax plus Communications Services Tax (CST) | +18–22% |
| Texas | State sales tax applies to most VoIP; local rates vary by city | +20–26% |
| California | High state PUC fees; CPUC surcharges; varies by county | +22–28% |
| New York State | State telecom surcharges plus MCTD tax in metro area | +22–26% |
| New York City | NYC telecom tax layered on top of state; one of the highest in the US | +30–36% |
| Chicago, IL | City of Chicago telecom tax is among the highest in the country at 7%; plus state and federal | +29–35% |
| Pennsylvania | PA gross receipts tax on telecom; can be substantial for larger deployments | +20–25% |
Ranges are approximate and based on 2025–2026 rates. Tax law changes frequently. Multi-state organizations with remote workers registered in high-tax cities can face blended rates that are difficult to predict without a provider quote.
Most VoIP providers assess taxes and E911 fees based on the registered service address of each user or line. For a company with all employees in one office, this is simple. For a company with remote workers spread across 15 states, each user's line may be taxed at a different rate.
The practical implication: a 200-seat company with workers in New York City, Chicago, California, and Oregon will have a different effective per-seat cost depending on where each employee is registered. The per-seat cost for a NYC user can be 20+ percentage points higher than for a user registered in Oregon.
Some providers allow you to register users to a central corporate address. Others automatically geo-locate. Others let you configure this per user. This choice has real billing consequences and is worth confirming before you sign.
Every quote from Bridgepointe includes an estimated total cost with fees and taxes factored in for your state. No surprises on month one of your invoice.