web statisticsweb stats

Business Phone Systems

Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Rate Thread
Joined: May 2010
Posts: 1
Member
Member
Offline
Joined: May 2010
Posts: 1
New to to this field, and just worked an issue where the carrier is stating a toll free number points to a ring to number, and not a DNIS. Can anyone provide any clarfication on what the difference is?


Keith
Atcom VoIP Phones
VoIP Demo

Best VoIP Phones Canada


Visit Atcom to get started with your new business VoIP phone system ASAP
Turn up is quick, painless, and can often be done same day.
Let us show you how to do VoIP right, resulting in crystal clear call quality and easy-to-use features that make everyone happy!
Proudly serving Canada from coast to coast.

Joined: May 2009
Posts: 1,198
Member
*****
Member
*****
Offline
Joined: May 2009
Posts: 1,198
A Ring to Number is a real phone number. The toll-free number is not pointed to your circuit, but is pointed to the telephone number riding on your circuit (or regular phone lines).

DNIS is routed directly to your circuit. Over-simplified, but that's the difference.

Joined: May 2002
Posts: 17,745
Likes: 37
Member
****
Member
****
Joined: May 2002
Posts: 17,745
Likes: 37
To add a bit to that DNIS digits are given to you to ring a specific phone or group in your phone system. An example would be someone calls your sales group and dials and 800#. Your carrier may give you only the last 4 to route to your sales group or totally stip all numbers and give you the digits you want. It's all in how the numbers are delivered to your site. Only time DNIS is used is when your pipe terminates directly into your carriers switch. If I'm wrong on any of this one of our CO members will correct it.


Retired phone dude
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 1,951
Likes: 2
RIP
*****
RIP
*****
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 1,951
Likes: 2
Toll-free numbers are phantom numbers that must point to or "terminate" on any number of objects. Objects include a hard POTS line, a DID on an analog or PRI circuit, a straight T1 (with DNIS digits to follow) and perhaps other services that I'm overlooking as I type.

I've got a hard line at home. Anyone who knows it can obviously grab some dialtone and call me. But it's also true that I can buy a toll-free number that will terminate on that line. Now whether you call my locally published number or whether you call the toll-free, you'll still ring the same line at my house.

That's what the carrier mans by "a toll free number point[ing] to a ring number".


"Press play and record at the same time" -- Tim Alberstein

Moderated by  dexman 

Link Copied to Clipboard
Newest Topics
3515 vodavi phones.
by Gary S. - 05/01/25 12:26 PM
AT&T Coinsoft
by ChrisRR - 04/30/25 02:39 PM
Inter-tel Encore CX aka Mitel 3000 circa 2008
by Telesystems - 04/27/25 02:20 PM
Just a little of what I've been working on
by John807 - 04/25/25 11:42 AM
Forum Statistics
Forums84
Topics94,524
Posts640,007
Members49,851
Most Online5,661
May 23rd, 2018
Newest Members
DEN2MM, ferhat_efe, utec, MoverDub, Kevin usama
49,851 Registered Users
Top Posters(30 Days)
Toner 5
dexman 4
Taddeo 4
Who's Online Now
1 members (Gary S.), 232 guests, and 39 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Contact Us | Sponsored by Atcom: One of the best VoIP Phone Canada Suppliers for your business telephone system!| Terms of Service

Sundance Communications is not affiliated with any of the above manufacturers. Sundance Phone System Forums - VOIP & Cloud Phone Help
©Copyright Sundance Communications 1998 - 2025
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 8.0.0