The NBN Switch-Off: Why Your Old Phone Line Stopped Working
For more than a century, Australian business phones ran on copper. The Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) carried standard landlines, and ISDN carried the multi-line services that powered office phone systems and on-premise PBXs. That era is over. As part of the National Broadband Network (NBN) rollout, the copper PSTN and ISDN network has been progressively decommissioned across the country, and in most areas the old copper voice services have been switched off entirely.
The practical consequence is simple but important: traditional business phone lines no longer work the way they used to. If your business still relies on legacy copper lines or an ISDN-connected PBX, that service has either already stopped or is living on borrowed time. This is not a Uniden marketing line, it is the structural reason so many Australian businesses have moved their phones to the cloud over the past few years.
The replacement for copper voice is internet-based voice. Instead of a dedicated phone line running to your building, your phone calls now travel as data over your internet connection, the same connection you use for email, cloud software, and web browsing. For the vast majority of Australian businesses, that internet connection is delivered over the NBN. So the question is no longer "what phone line do I have?" but "what internet connection do I have, and what phone system runs over the top of it?"
Why this is actually good news for business
The switch-off sounds disruptive, and for anyone caught on legacy hardware it can be. But moving voice onto the internet unlocks capabilities the copper network could never offer: your number stops being tied to a physical socket, staff can take business calls anywhere, and features like AI call agents, call routing, voicemail-to-email, and analytics come standard. A copper line could ring one desk. A cloud phone system can ring a desk, a mobile app, a laptop, and an AI agent at the same time, then follow your team wherever they go.
If You're Still on Copper or ISDN
Do not wait for your line to simply stop working. Legacy copper and ISDN services have been decommissioned across most of Australia, and once your area is switched off, an unmigrated system can leave you without phones. Moving to a cloud phone system that runs over your NBN connection is the direct replacement, and it can be done while your old service is still live so there is no gap. Uniden Voice Over Cloud keeps your old service running until your numbers have ported across.
0
copper PSTN lines needed, voice runs over the internet
~100
kbps of bandwidth per concurrent voice call
6
NBN technology types, all can carry business voice
100%
Australian-hosted with Uniden Voice Over Cloud
How a Cloud Phone System Runs Over the NBN
The single most useful thing to understand is this: a cloud phone system runs over the top of your NBN connection. It is not tied to a phone line, and it is not a service the NBN itself provides. The NBN gives you an internet connection. Your cloud phone provider gives you a phone system that uses that connection to carry calls.
The technology, in plain terms
Cloud calling uses VoIP, Voice over Internet Protocol. When you speak, your voice is converted into small digital data packets, sent over your internet connection to your provider's servers in the cloud, and delivered to the person you are calling. Their voice comes back the same way. The "phone system", the numbers, extensions, call routing, voicemail, IVR menus, and AI agents, all lives in secure data centres, not in a box on your wall. You simply connect to it over the internet.
Because the intelligence lives in the cloud, the device you use is almost irrelevant. You can make and receive business calls from a softphone app on your mobile, a desktop app on your computer, a Bluetooth or IP desk handset, or all of them at once. They all connect back to the same cloud system over whatever internet connection they happen to be on, your office NBN, home broadband, or a phone's mobile data.
The Key Distinction
The NBN is the road. Your cloud phone system is the vehicle. The NBN delivers the internet connection to your premises. Uniden Voice Over Cloud is the phone system that travels over that connection. That separation is exactly why a cloud phone is so flexible: change your NBN plan, move premises, or fail over to 4G, and the phone system keeps working, because it was never tied to a particular line in the first place.
What you need at your premises
For a cloud phone on the NBN, the on-site requirements are refreshingly light. You need an active NBN (or other internet) connection, an NBN connection box and a modem/router appropriate to your connection type, and devices to make calls on, which can simply be the apps on the computers and mobiles your team already has. There is no PBX cabinet, no bank of phone lines, and no proprietary hardware to buy or maintain. Adding a user is a setting in the cloud, not a cabling job.
NBN Connection Types for Business Explained
Not all NBN connections are the same. The NBN is delivered using several different technologies depending on your location, and business-grade options sit above the standard residential-style plans. The good news for voice is that every one of these can carry business calls, because voice needs so little bandwidth. What differs is speed, upload capacity, latency, and reliability, which matter more for large call volumes and for everything else your business does online.
FTTP — Fibre to the Premises
Fibre runs all the way into your building. The fastest and most reliable option, with high upload speeds and low latency. Ideal for busy offices and high call volumes.
FTTC — Fibre to the Curb
Fibre to a pit near your property, then a short copper run inside. Fast and low-latency for typical business call volumes, with solid, consistent performance.
FTTN — Fibre to the Node
Fibre to a street cabinet, then copper to your premises. Works fine for voice, but speed and quality vary with distance from the node, so check your line.
HFC — Hybrid Fibre Coaxial
Uses the existing pay-TV coaxial cable network. Delivers good speeds and handles business voice comfortably in most areas.
Fixed Wireless
A radio connection to a nearby NBN tower, common in regional areas. Carries voice well, but has higher latency and can be affected by weather, so pair it with mobile failover.
Business NBN / Enterprise Ethernet
Premium business-grade fibre with symmetric speeds, priority data, and enhanced service levels. The gold standard for larger teams and mission-critical voice.
Business NBN and enterprise ethernet: what you gain
Standard NBN plans are built for general use and are shared, best-effort services. Business NBN and enterprise ethernet add things a busy phone system benefits from: symmetric or high upload speeds, prioritised traffic, tighter service level agreements, and faster fault resolution. If your business runs a high volume of simultaneous calls, or your phones are genuinely mission-critical, a business-grade connection is worth considering. That said, for most small and mid-sized businesses a good standard NBN plan carries voice perfectly well, because the bandwidth voice consumes is tiny.
You Don't Have to Choose Based on Your Phone System
Because Uniden Voice Over Cloud runs over the top of whatever connection you have, you are free to pick your NBN technology and plan based on your overall business needs, not your phone system. Already have FTTN? It works. Upgrading to FTTP or Business NBN later? Your phone system carries across unchanged. You are never locked in to a connection type by your phones.
How Much Bandwidth Does Business Voice Need?
This is where businesses most often overestimate the requirement. People assume that carrying phone calls over the internet demands a huge, expensive connection. In reality, voice is one of the lightest things you can put on a network.
The actual numbers
A single high-quality VoIP call typically uses somewhere between 85 and 100 kbps in each direction (with common codecs; efficient codecs can use less). That is kilobits, not megabits. To put that in perspective:
- 1 concurrent call: around 0.1 Mbps up and down.
- 5 concurrent calls: around 0.5 Mbps up and down.
- 10 concurrent calls: around 1 Mbps up and down.
- 20 concurrent calls: around 2 Mbps up and down.
Almost any NBN plan can handle that comfortably. The catch is that these calls run alongside everything else your business does online, video meetings, cloud software, backups, and general browsing, so you need enough headroom that voice is never squeezed. A sensible approach is to allow roughly 100 kbps per concurrent call, then make sure your connection has capacity to spare on top of your normal usage.
Speed isn't the whole story: latency, jitter, and packet loss
For voice, connection quality matters far more than raw speed. Three measures decide how good your calls sound:
- Latency is the delay between speaking and being heard. Keep it low (ideally under about 150 ms one-way) and conversations feel natural. High latency causes talk-over and awkward pauses.
- Jitter is variation in the timing of packets arriving. High jitter makes audio choppy or robotic. A stable connection keeps jitter low.
- Packet loss is data that never arrives. Even a few per cent causes dropouts and words disappearing mid-sentence.
This is one reason onshore hosting matters. When your voice data has to travel to servers overseas and back, every packet accrues extra latency, and quality suffers. Because Uniden Voice Over Cloud is 100% Australian-hosted, voice data stays in the country, keeping latency low and calls crisp.
Watch Your Upload Speed
Most NBN plans are asymmetric, meaning download is much faster than upload. Because a call sends data in both directions, your upload speed is usually the limiting factor for how many simultaneous calls a connection can carry cleanly. When you assess a connection for voice, check the upload figure, not just the headline download speed. If your upload is tight, a business-grade or symmetric plan, or a device that prioritises voice traffic, makes a real difference.
Keeping Your Existing Number (Porting)
One of the biggest worries businesses have about moving off copper is losing the number their customers, suppliers, and Google listing all know. You will not lose it. Moving to a cloud phone system does not mean a new number.
What porting is
Porting is the process of transferring your existing phone number from your old provider or the old copper service to your new cloud phone provider. Once the port completes, your number simply lives on the new platform, and customers keep calling the same number they always have. Local geographic numbers, 1300 and 1800 inbound numbers, and most standard business numbers can all be ported.
How to switch without downtime
The key to a clean move is timing. A well-run provider keeps your old service live until the port completes, so there is never a window where your number is unreachable. You get set up on the new cloud system, test it, and only when everything is ready does the number switch across. Done properly, customers never notice, calls simply keep arriving, and your team is already working on the new platform.
Porting with Uniden Voice Over Cloud
Uniden handles the porting process for you, including the paperwork with your existing carrier. Porting existing numbers is free for a limited time, and your old service stays active until the port completes, so there is zero downtime and no missed calls. If you also want a new 1300 or 1800 inbound number, that can be set up alongside your ported numbers. See our guide on how to get a 1300 or 1800 number for more.
Reliability on the NBN and Failover Options
Let's address the concern honestly. On the old copper network, the phone drew its power from the exchange, so a standard landline often kept working during a local power cut. A cloud phone system is different: it needs both power and internet at your premises to run on your desk devices. That sounds like a step backwards, but in practice a well-designed cloud setup is more resilient than copper ever was, because the calls themselves live in the cloud and can be redirected instantly.
Why the cloud is inherently resilient
The phone system, your numbers, routing, and voicemail, sits in redundant, professionally run data centres, not on your premises. A local hardware fault, a flooded office, or a tripped power board cannot take your phone system offline, because the system was never in your building. This is the opposite of an on-premise PBX, where a single failed box or a cut cable takes down every phone at once. With the system in the cloud, the only things you manage locally are your internet connection and your power, and both can be backed up.
The three layers of failover
Mobile-App Failover
The most powerful safety net. Because your business number lives in the cloud, calls can ring the mobile apps on staff phones over 4G/5G. If the office connection drops, calls simply keep arriving on mobiles, no action needed.
UPS for Power
An uninterruptible power supply keeps your modem, router, and NBN connection box running through short power interruptions, so a brief outage never drops your on-site phones or internet.
4G/5G Internet Failover
A router with a mobile backup connection automatically switches to 4G/5G if the NBN goes down, keeping your desk phones and internet online through a fixed-line fault.
Layer these together and you have resilience the copper network could never match. A short blackout? The UPS rides it out. NBN fault? The router fails over to 4G/5G, or calls divert to mobile apps. Whole-site problem? Calls automatically route to staff mobiles, another site, or an AI agent that keeps answering. The system's job is to make sure a customer's call always lands somewhere useful.
"Knowing that our phones are always connecting our customers with the right staff has streamlined our customer engagement. Having features like this, which are usually only available to larger companies, in a cost-effective manner is excellent. Now that I am using the mobile application I can stay connected with my business when I am out of the office." Marie-Claire, Owner, Wealth of Health
What Happens in an NBN or Power Outage
Because this is the question businesses ask most, it is worth walking through exactly what happens, and how to stay reachable, in each scenario.
Scenario 1: The power goes out at your office
Without power, your modem, router, and NBN connection box stop, so your desk devices lose the internet. But your business number still lives in the cloud, untouched. With mobile-app failover configured, incoming calls simply ring the Uniden apps on staff mobiles over their phones' mobile data, so you keep answering. Add a UPS and even your on-site equipment can keep running through a short outage. Either way, customers reach you.
Scenario 2: The NBN has an outage but you still have power
If the NBN itself has a fault, a router with 4G/5G failover automatically switches to mobile broadband, and your desk phones and internet keep working. Even without that hardware, calls can be set to divert to mobile apps, to another office, or to voicemail-to-email, so nothing is lost. Because the phone system lives in the cloud, an NBN fault at your building never reaches the system itself, only your local connection to it.
Scenario 3: Everything is down at your premises
Even in a total local failure, flood, fire, extended blackout, the cloud phone system keeps running everywhere else. Calls route to staff mobiles wherever they are, to a backup site, or to an AI call agent that answers, takes messages, and books appointments until you are back. Your customers experience a business that is still open, not a dead line.
Your Simple Outage-Ready Checklist
1. Configure mobile-app failover so calls ring staff phones automatically.
2. Add a UPS to keep your modem/router running through short power cuts.
3. Consider a router with 4G/5G backup for internet redundancy.
4. Set failover call routing (mobile, second site, or AI agent) and voicemail-to-email.
5. Test it. Your Uniden account manager can help you set all of this up and check it works.
Old Copper Line vs Basic NBN VoIP vs Uniden Voice
The clearest way to see where a modern NBN business phone sits is to line it up against the copper line it replaces, and against a bare-bones VoIP service. The table below compares the retired copper PSTN line, a basic NBN VoIP service, and a full cloud platform (using Uniden Voice Over Cloud as the example).
| Capability | Old Copper Line (PSTN) | Basic NBN VoIP | Uniden Voice Over Cloud |
|---|---|---|---|
| Still available in 2026 | ✗ Switched off | ✓ | ✓ |
| Runs over any NBN type | ✗ Copper only | ✓ | ✓ FTTP/FTTC/FTTN/HFC/Wireless |
| Keep existing number | ~ If not yet cut off | ✓ Port | ✓ Free porting, no downtime |
| Calls follow you (mobile apps) | ✗ Rings one desk | ~ Basic app | ✓ Android, iOS, desktop |
| Mobile-app failover in outage | ✗ | ~ Manual | ✓ Automatic |
| Works during local power cut | ~ Exchange-powered | ~ Needs UPS + failover | ✓ Calls divert to mobiles |
| Scales without new lines | ✗ Per line | ~ Per channel | ✓ Add users in minutes |
| AI call agents included | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ Standard, not an add-on |
| Australian-hosted (low latency) | ✓ Local | ~ Varies | ✓ 100% Australian |
| Local Australian support | ~ Varies | ~ Often offshore | ✓ 24-hour, account manager |
The pattern is clear. The copper line is simply no longer an option in most areas. A basic NBN VoIP service brings your calls back, but often stops at dial tone, leaving you to arrange failover, apps, and support yourself. A full cloud platform delivers the resilience, mobility, and features the copper network never could, which is exactly why Australian businesses migrating off PSTN are choosing cloud phone systems rather than like-for-like replacements. For the bigger picture on that choice, see our guide to VoIP vs landline.
Why Uniden Voice Works Seamlessly Over Any NBN Connection
Plenty of providers can put a dial tone on your NBN. Far fewer make the whole experience, quality, resilience, migration, and support, genuinely painless and genuinely Australian. Here is what makes Uniden Voice Over Cloud the right fit for a business on the NBN.
Works Over Any Connection
FTTP, FTTC, FTTN, HFC, Fixed Wireless, Business NBN, or even 4G/5G, Uniden Voice runs over whatever internet you have. No connection type locks you in, and upgrades carry across unchanged.
Automatic Mobile Failover
Your business number and full feature set follow you to free apps on Android, iOS, Windows, Mac, and Linux, so calls divert to mobiles the moment the fixed line or power drops. You never miss a call.
100% Australian-Hosted
Voice data stays onshore for low latency and crisp call quality, and your customer data never leaves Australia. Australian-founded (Uniden, a trusted brand here since 1966) and Australian-built.
AI Call Agents Included
AI agents trained on your business data, speaking in authentic Australian voices, answer, route, and book, and keep answering in an outage. Included as standard, not a paid add-on.
Free Porting, Zero Downtime
Keep your existing numbers, including 1300 and 1800. Porting is free for a limited time and your old service stays live until the port completes, so customers never notice the switch.
Local Support to Get It Right
24-hour local Australian support and a dedicated account manager help you check your connection, configure failover, and set up routing. No DIY, no overseas call centres.
The practical upshot: with Uniden Voice Over Cloud you get a business phone that treats the NBN as what it is, just the road your calls travel on, and adds the resilience, mobility, AI, and local support that turn a bare internet connection into a phone system your business can rely on. With simple per-user pricing, 50+ features included, no minimum user requirement, and a guarantee to beat any genuine competitor quote, it is built for Australian businesses of every size. For a wider view, see our complete guide to Business VoIP in Australia.
"Uniden Voice Over Cloud perfectly complements our billing software. The ease of integration with our billing software and great local support improved our own customer interactions and now many of our customers have made the switch." Chris, Operations Manager, PracBill
How to Set Up Your NBN Business Phone
Moving your phones onto the NBN sounds like a major project. With a well-run cloud provider it is a guided, low-risk process. Here is the actual path from where you are today to your first call on the new system.
Step 1: Check your connection
Confirm what NBN technology and plan you have and, in particular, your upload speed. Any reasonable NBN connection carries voice, but it is worth a quick check so failover can be planned for connections like Fixed Wireless. Book a free demo at unidenvoice.com/get-started or call 1300 881 662, and the team can help assess whether your connection is voice-ready.
Step 2: Choose your plan and users
Pick your per-user plan and decide how many seats you need. With no minimum user requirement, you can start with one and scale later. Your dedicated account manager helps map your current setup, extensions, departments, and call flows, onto the new cloud platform.
Step 3: Port your existing numbers
Keep your business numbers, including any 1300 or 1800. Uniden handles the porting process, and for a limited time porting is free. Your old service stays active until the port completes, so there is zero downtime and customers never notice the switch.
Step 4: Download the apps and connect devices
Install the free Android, iOS, and desktop apps (Windows, Mac, or Linux) so staff can start calling immediately, no hardware purchase required. If you want desk phones, plug-and-play IP or Bluetooth handsets connect to your network and configure themselves. Every device connects back to the same cloud system over your NBN.
Step 5: Set up failover, then go live
Configure mobile-app failover, call routing, and voicemail-to-email so you stay reachable in any outage, and if you want extra resilience, add a UPS for your modem and consider a 4G/5G backup. Your account manager configures most of this for you and monitors the first few weeks. Then you are live, on a resilient Australian cloud phone system running over your NBN.
Frequently Asked Questions
What to Read Next: The Cloud Communications Cluster
This guide explains how business phones work on the NBN. These related articles go deeper into the decisions around cloud phone systems, from VoIP versus landline to costs and troubleshooting.


