Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Android SMS is positioned around “Use Your Phone as SMS Gateway”: it turns an Android phone into an SMS gateway and lets applications send SMS messages through a RESTful API. It is suited to use cases such as notifications, authentication, and automated messaging. It is not a traditional carrier-grade SMS aggregation platform; instead, it relies on the user’s own Android device and SIM card to send messages.
In terms of channels, the site only presents SMS, with no mention of email, voice, or IM. Features include an SMS API, bulk sending, multi-device support, API Keys, and QR-code device pairing. Multi-device support can help improve throughput and redundancy, but actual capacity still depends on the phone, SIM card, carrier restrictions, and network stability. On performance, the website claims 98% cost savings compared with traditional SMS gateways, an average setup time of 3 minutes, and 500K+ messages per month, but it does not publish delivery rates, latency, SLA, or carrier performance by region. As a result, production-critical workflows should be stress-tested first.
Pricing is monthly: USD 1/month includes 100 Credits; from USD 5/month, plans begin to offer unlimited Credits/devices/contacts; Starter is USD 9/month with 15,000 Credits; Advance is USD 19/month with 50,000 Credits; and Unlimited is USD 29/month. All plans list API Access and Email Support. The pricing is very low, but the page does not explain whether “unlimited” is affected by fair-use policies, carrier risk controls, or device limitations.
On security, the site emphasizes that data stays on the user’s own devices and servers, and that industry-standard encryption is used for API communications. This is appealing for privacy-sensitive workloads. However, compliance information is clearly limited: there is no visible explanation of user consent, opt-out handling, anti-spam policies, regional regulations, or restrictions on marketing SMS. Using it for verification codes or notifications is relatively controllable; using it for bulk marketing requires your own compliance review.
The advantages are low cost, simple integration, support for bulk sending and multiple devices, and not handing data over to a third-party SMS provider. The downsides are that you need to keep the phone online and maintain its battery, network, and SIM card status, while delivery rate and compliance assurances are less transparent than with mature cloud SMS providers. It is better suited to developers, small teams, internal systems, low-cost notifications, and test environments. For financial verification codes, large-scale marketing, or SLA-critical workloads, you should first consider Twilio, MessageBird, Vonage, Plivo, or, for the Chinese market, Alibaba Cloud SMS, Tencent Cloud SMS, and similar services.
The page does not provide information on access from mainland China, payment methods, or local carrier compatibility, so china_access can only be assessed as unknown. If using it in China, you still need to confirm whether the website/API can be accessed directly, whether subscription payments are available, and whether bulk sending via local SIM cards may trigger carrier restrictions.
⚠ 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 ecomnuggets.com official site.
ecomnuggets.com is an Unknown Comms & Email provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $5.00, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach ecomnuggets.com directly.