| Zoom Phone |
Compared to Zoom Phone, Linphone offers a strong cost advantage thanks to its open-source model and free core application. It provides deeper SIP-level control, greater flexibility for custom deployments, and avoids recurring per-user licensing fees, making it attractive for organizations with in-house technical expertise. |
| Microsoft Teams |
Versus Microsoft Teams, Linphone excels in openness and interoperability. It integrates easily with existing SIP infrastructures, supports end-to-end encryption options, and allows full white-label customization. This makes it better suited for organizations wanting control over data, branding, and infrastructure rather than a closed ecosystem. |
| Cisco Webex |
Against Cisco Webex, Linphone stands out for its lightweight architecture and lower total cost of ownership. It can be deployed on-premise or customized extensively, avoiding expensive enterprise licenses while still supporting voice, video, messaging, and secure communications based on open standards. |
| Skype |
Compared to Skype, Linphone provides professional-grade SIP support and advanced configuration options. It is better suited for business and telecom use cases, offering higher security, extensibility via SDKs, and the ability to integrate directly into custom applications or VoIP platforms. |
| Jitsi |
While Jitsi focuses mainly on conferencing, Linphone offers a more complete unified communications stack. It combines softphone, messaging, video, SDKs, and a SIP server, making it more versatile for enterprises or developers seeking an end-to-end, customizable real-time communication solution. |