I get this question from business owners about once a week: "If SIP trunks use the internet, and cloud phone systems use the internet... what's the actual difference?" It's a good question. Both get marketed as "phone service over the internet," which makes them sound like the same thing. They're not. Not even close. The difference between SIP trunking and a cloud phone system is the difference between owning your house and renting an apartment. Both keep the rain off your head. One of them you own. I've been configuring Cisco phone systems for small businesses for over 20 years. This confusion costs people real money, and I want to clear it up.
What Is a SIP Trunk?
A SIP trunk is a phone line delivered over the internet instead of through a physical copper wire from the phone company. That's it. SIP stands for Session Initiation Protocol, but you don't need to care about that. What matters is this: a SIP trunk replaces the traditional phone line that connects your office to the outside world.
Think of it like this. Your phone system is the brain. It handles all the internal stuff — routing calls between desks, voicemail, auto-attendant, hold music, transfers, conference calls. The SIP trunk is just the road that connects your phone system to the rest of the world so people can call you and you can call them.
With a SIP trunk:
- You own the phone system
- The SIP trunk just carries your calls in and out
- Internal calls between phones in your office never touch the SIP trunk at all — they travel over your local network
- You choose your SIP provider, and you can switch providers without changing anything about your phone system
- Typical cost: $10–25 per month for a trunk
That last point is important. A SIP trunk is a commodity. If your SIP provider raises prices or gives you bad service, you cancel and sign up with another one tomorrow. Your phone system, your extensions, your voicemail, your auto-attendant — none of that changes.
What Is a Cloud Phone System?
A cloud phone system (also called hosted VoIP or hosted PBX) is completely different. With a cloud phone system, you don't own any of the phone system equipment. The entire phone system — the PBX, the call routing, the voicemail, the auto-attendant, everything — lives on servers in someone else's data center. RingCentral, Vonage, 8x8, Ooma, Nextiva — these are all cloud phone system providers.
You pay a monthly per-user fee for access to the system. Every phone in your office connects to the cloud provider's servers over the internet. Every call — including internal calls between two desks sitting 10 feet apart — routes through the provider's cloud infrastructure and back.
With a cloud phone system:
- The provider owns the system — you rent access
- You pay per user, per month, forever
- All calls route through the provider's servers, even internal ones
- Your call quality depends on the provider's infrastructure and your internet connection
- If the provider has an outage, every phone in your office goes dead
- If you want to cancel, good luck — RingCentral has 1.9 stars on Trustpilot, and cancellation is the #1 complaint
So What's Actually Different?
Here's a side-by-side breakdown that makes the differences crystal clear:
| Feature | SIP Trunking | Cloud Phone System |
|---|---|---|
| What you own | The entire phone system — PBX, phones, config | Nothing — you rent everything |
| What the provider controls | Only the phone line (trunk) in and out | Everything — your PBX, features, call routing, data |
| Internal calls | Stay on your local network — fast and free | Route through the provider's cloud servers |
| Monthly cost | $10–25/trunk + no per-user fees | $25–60/user/month, forever |
| Contracts | Month-to-month SIP service, cancel anytime | Typically 1–3 year lock-in with auto-renewal |
| If provider has an outage | Internal calls still work — only outside calls affected | Every phone in your office goes dead |
| If you want to leave | Switch SIP providers in minutes, keep your system | Start from scratch — new system, new config, new training |
| Call quality control | You control QoS on your own network | Dependent on provider infrastructure and internet |
The Money Part
Let's run real numbers for a 20-person office over 5 years.
Cloud phone system (e.g., RingCentral): 20 users x $30/month = $600/month. Over 5 years that's $36,000. And that assumes they don't raise prices — which they will.
On-premise Cisco system + SIP trunking: One-time system cost around $5,190 (from VoIP PBX Express). SIP trunking at roughly $125/month for a business that size. Over 5 years: $5,190 + ($125 x 60 months) = $12,690.
That's a savings of over $23,000. And at the end of 5 years, you still own the system. With the cloud, you own nothing. Stop paying and your phones go silent.
"But Isn't On-Premise Complicated?"
This is the myth that cloud providers love to push. "On-premise is complicated. You need an IT department. You need a server room." None of that is true anymore — at least not with how we do it at VoIP PBX Express.
We pre-configure about 90% of your system before it ships. Your extensions, voicemail boxes, auto-attendant greetings, call routing rules — all set up and tested before the box leaves our shop. When it arrives at your office, you plug in the PBX, connect your phones, and you're making calls. The typical install takes under 2 hours. No IT department needed. No server room. No complicated configuration on your end.
If you can plug in a router, you can set up one of our systems. And if you need help, we're a phone call away — real engineers, not a chatbot.
Who Should Use SIP Trunking + On-Premise?
This combination is the right fit if you:
- Have a physical office location with 5 to 100 phones
- Want to control your costs and stop paying per-user monthly fees
- Need reliable call quality that doesn't depend on a cloud provider's servers
- Want the freedom to switch SIP providers anytime without rebuilding your phone system
- Are replacing an aging phone system and want something that will last another 10+ years
- Have been burned by a cloud provider — bad support, surprise price hikes, impossible cancellation
When Cloud Actually Makes More Sense
I'm not going to pretend cloud is always wrong. There are situations where it genuinely fits better:
- Your team is fully remote with no physical office — everyone works from laptops in different cities
- You need deep CRM integrations that are native to a specific cloud platform (Salesforce + RingCentral, for example)
- You want built-in AI-powered analytics, call transcription, or sentiment analysis and don't want to bolt it on yourself
- You only need 1–3 phone lines and the monthly cost is negligible
But for most small businesses with a physical location and 5+ employees? On-premise with SIP trunking wins on cost, reliability, and control every single time.
Here's What It Comes Down To
SIP trunking is a phone line. A cloud phone system is a rented PBX. They both use the internet, but that's where the similarity ends. One gives you ownership and control. The other gives you a monthly bill that never stops.
If you're tired of paying $30–60 per user per month for a system you don't own, and you want something that actually belongs to your business, it's worth having a conversation.
Get a Custom Proposal — tell us how many phones you need, and we'll put together a system with real pricing. No contracts, no pressure.
Or call us directly: 844-486-4766. You'll talk to an actual engineer, not a sales rep.