Pure IP Blog

What it really takes to deploy Teams Phone globally

Written by Tania Morrill | Sep 22, 2025 3:39:27 PM

Summary:

Microsoft Teams Phone can be deployed globally, but regulations, carrier coverage, and compliance vary by country. Enterprises must navigate emergency calling, lawful intercept, and data residency laws while choosing between Calling Plans, Operator Connect, and Direct Routing. This blog outlines the key pitfalls, global compliance trends, and a framework for structured rollouts. 



Microsoft Teams Phone promises a single global solution. The reality is harder. Enterprises quickly discover that moving from pilot projects to worldwide deployments isn’t just about licenses and provisioning. It’s about navigating a maze of regulations, uneven carrier coverage, and technical obligations that change from country to country.

If you’re planning a global rollout, the challenge isn’t turning on Teams Phone. It’s keeping it compliant everywhere.

This guide breaks down the pitfalls and gives IT leaders a framework to build a global Teams Phone strategy that works in practice, not just on paper. 

Why global isn't simple

The marketing is compelling: one platform, global reach, consistent experience. But under the surface, Teams Phone is delivered through three very different connectivity models — Calling Plans, Operator Connect, and Direct Routing. 

That matters. Each model covers different geographies, with different carriers, and comes with different compliance responsibilities. No enterprise can rely on just one.

Now layer on national telecom rules, emergency calling mandates, and data privacy laws. Suddenly, what looked like a global rollout turns into dozens of parallel projects.


Compliance requirements by region

Compliance isn’t a checkbox. It’s a dealbreaker. If you miss the rules, you’re not just non-compliant — in some countries, you’re illegal.

The details vary widely. In the US, Teams Phone must support accurate emergency calling and caller ID authentication. In India, enterprises must keep domestic and international calls strictly separate. In China, only licensed carriers can deliver PSTN — OTT VoIP isn’t even allowed.

Here’s a snapshot of what IT leaders need to plan for in 2025:

Region 

Key regulations

Compliance requirements

Notes for Teams Phone Deployments

United States

Kari’s Law, RAY BAUM’s Act, CALEA, STIR/SHAKEN

Direct 911 dialing; dispatchable location for E911; lawful intercept; caller ID authentication

Must configure location-based routing; SBCs and carriers must support lawful intercept

European Union

EECC, GDPR

Mandatory access to 112; number portability within 1 business day; call recording obligations in regulated industries

Requires GDPR-compliant call data storage

United Kingdom

Ofcom rules, PSTN switch-off 2025, CLI rules

Mandatory 999/112 access; real-time CLI validation; VoIP-only post-2025

Legacy PBXs must be migrated before switch-off

India

Unified Telecom Act 2023, DPDP Act 2023

Mandatory 112 access; separation of domestic and international traffic; 1-year call detail retention; lawful intercept

Licensed providers only; real-name registration required

China

PIPL, cybersecurity law, real-name registration

Licensed carriers only; data localization; interception capabilities

OTT VoIP restricted; Teams Phone must use licensed partners

Brazil

LGPD, ANATEL

Emergency access; lawful intercept; billing records for 5 years

Strong enforcement of data privacy and storage

South Africa

RICA, ICASA

Emergency calling; 3-year metadata retention; lawful intercept

Real-name SIM and VoIP registration required

Australia

Telecommunications Act, Data Retention Act

000/112 access; 2-year metadata retention; lawful intercept

PSTN switch-off underway; all voice migrating to VoIP

SE Asia

National telecom laws, SIM registration

Mandatory interception, data localization, SIM/VoIP user registration

Often requires local carrier partnerships


Global trends shaping 2025 rollouts

Enterprises aren’t just managing today’s rules — they’re bracing for tomorrow’s. Several global trends are reshaping what “compliant” means:

  • PSTN switch-off: The UK, Australia, and parts of the EU are shutting down legacy PSTN. Japan and Germany are next. Enterprises that don’t migrate PBXs risk losing service entirely.
  • VoIP = PSTN in the eyes of regulators: The old distinction has vanished. Cloud voice providers are now bound by the same obligations as traditional telcos.
  • Caller ID authentication: STIR/SHAKEN in the US and Canada, CLI rules in the UK and India — spoofed calls are being blocked at the network level.
  • Data residency laws: China’s PIPL, India’s DPDP Act, Brazil’s LGPD, and GDPR in the EU force enterprises to store call data locally. Multi-country data flows are heavily restricted.
  • Real-name registration: China, India, and South Africa already enforce this. More SE Asian markets are adopting the same model.

Compliance isn’t static. The baseline is rising, and Teams Phone must keep pace with regulations that treat VoIP like critical national infrastructure.

Connectivity models in practice

Teams Phone gives you flexibility, but it also forces decisions.

  • Calling Plans are quick to deploy but only available in Microsoft-served markets. They work best for small offices or straightforward use cases.
  • Operator Connect extends coverage where certified carriers offer PSTN replacement. It simplifies management but only in supported geographies.
  • Direct Routing is the safety net. It works everywhere, but requires SBCs and local carriers. It’s often the only legal option in markets like India, China, or South Africa.

Most enterprises discover they need a combination of Operator Connect and Direct Routing - Operator Connect where coverage is strong, Direct Routing for everywhere else.

Compare Calling Plans, Operator Connect, and Direct Routing in our Ultimate Guide to Teams Calling >>

Designing a rollout framework

A compliant global rollout doesn’t happen by accident. It needs structure.

  1. Map regulations by country: Start with a compliance audit. Emergency calling, lawful intercept, data retention — every region is different.
  2. Match models to markets: Decide which countries get Calling Plans, which get Operator Connect, and where Direct Routing is unavoidable.
  3. Unify governance: Standardize number management, reporting, and compliance checks across carriers and regions.
  4. Phase migrations: Roll out market by market. Start with the easy ones. Build lessons learned before tackling high-risk regions.
  5. Audit continuously: Laws change. Enterprises must treat compliance as a living process, not a one-off project.

Process matters as much as technology. Without a framework, global rollouts unravel under their own complexity.

The real strategy for IT leaders

Microsoft Teams Phone is viable as a global telephony platform. But only if enterprises design around compliance and coverage as first-class priorities.

That means mixing models, working with local carriers, and accepting that “global” actually means tailoring solutions country by country.

The IT leaders who succeed aren’t the ones chasing simplicity. They’re the ones who build frameworks that handle complexity head-on.

 

Global voice projects don’t fail on technology. They fail on compliance and complexity. Pure IP solves both, delivering secure Teams Phone deployments across 80+ countries. Speak to our team and get started.