Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
MonsterVoIP is a U.S.-based cloud communications and business VoIP provider. It started in Los Angeles and later became a nationwide provider of cloud business phone systems. Its product lineup covers Cloud PBX, CCaaS contact centers, SIP Trunking, Cloud Fax, video conferencing, SMS/MMS, team messaging, and call recording. Its positioning is an all-in-one enterprise communications platform designed to replace complex legacy phone systems.
In terms of channels, MonsterVoIP is clearly voice-first. It offers cloud PBX, unlimited calling in the U.S. and Canada, auto attendants, IVR, call queues, call recording, visual voicemail, and call analytics. It also extends into SMS/MMS, Chat & IM, video conferencing, and cloud fax. Its contact center features include sentiment analysis, agent performance tracking, reporting and analytics, recording quality assurance, call monitoring, and multi-level auto attendants. The official site also highlights compatibility with 50+ phone brands and mentions 20+/50+/250+ CRM integrations, listing Salesforce, HubSpot, Zoho, Microsoft Teams, and others. However, we did not find detailed information about open APIs, SDKs, or developer documentation.
Pricing appears to be mostly sales-consultation based. The official site states transparent pricing, no hidden fees, no setup fees, and no contracts. Voice and team collaboration plans include taxes, 24/7 support, number porting, and unlimited calling in the U.S. and Canada. Visible add-ons include extra local numbers at $4, WebFax at $10, and a toll-free number with 1000 minutes at $20. Quotes are required for more than 10 users. On the performance side, its selling points include a nationwide geographically redundant network, multiple data centers, clear voice quality, SD-WAN optimization, and “guaranteed connectivity.” However, it does not disclose quantified metrics such as SLA terms, uptime percentage, latency, or packet loss.
On compliance, its financial services page claims compliance with SEC and FINRA requirements. Its CCaaS materials mention TLS, auditing, routing, and reporting. The call recording page explains U.S. federal one-party consent rules and state-level differences, indicating basic coverage of U.S. phone recording compliance. Its strengths include a complete feature set, strong deployment support, no contracts, and support for remote work and industry-specific scenarios. Its weaknesses are that headline plan pricing is not public, and there is limited information on international coverage, payment methods, API capabilities, and SLA commitments. MonsterVoIP is better suited for small and midsize businesses in the U.S./North America, financial institutions, sales teams, customer support centers, and organizations migrating to cloud PBX.
The official site does not provide information about access from mainland China, RMB payments, ICP filing, or China local numbers, so its China access status can only be rated as unknown. If serving customers or employees in China, further testing may be needed for network connectivity, voice quality, and payment availability. For China-focused scenarios, it can be compared with WeCom, Tencent Meeting, and Alibaba Cloud voice services. For international cloud communications, alternatives include RingCentral, Nextiva, 8x8, Zoom Phone, Dialpad, and Twilio.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on monstervoip.com official site.
monstervoip.com is an United States Comms & Email provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach monstervoip.com directly.