From 345c22e561c4764ffdda797e4a547ebc4c6d2fa2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: justin
Impact: Over 1,860 interconnected VoIP providers operate in the US, but only 133 have direct NANPA access. The vast majority obtain numbers through resale. If adopted, many downstream resellers would need to either obtain direct NANPA access or exit the market.
Status: NPRM (proposed rule, not yet adopted). Comment period: 30/60 days after Federal Register publication. Final rules TBD.
All providers receiving US numbers — not just VoIP — must certify under penalty of perjury that they don't facilitate illegal robocalls, comply with STIR/SHAKEN, and report foreign ownership. 30 days to comply. Extended to all resellers.
FCC proposing minimum holding periods for phone numbers. Currently robocallers use hundreds of millions of numbers once and discard them. 18% of all reported unwanted calls come from numbers with minimal call history.
Providers must identify all resellers by name and contact info in their Numbering Resource Utilization reports. Resellers may be required to file their own NRUF reports. State commissions could deny numbering resources.
Both the NANPA direct-access provider AND the first-level reseller would be jointly and severally responsible for robocall violations on their numbers. This makes upstream providers reluctant to wholesale to small or unproven carriers.
These rules apply to US numbering resources administered by NANPA. Canadian carriers operating with CRTC-assigned Canadian numbers are not directly subject to FCC number assignment rules. Canadian carriers obtain US DIDs through US wholesale providers (like Flowroute/Iristel) who handle NANPA compliance. The single-level restriction, if adopted, would affect the US supply chain — but a Canadian carrier purchasing from a compliant US wholesaler at the first reseller level would still be a valid arrangement. Canada administers its own numbering through CNAC under CRTC authority. -
This structure is built for legitimate, longer-duration conversational voice — UCaaS, hosted PBX, business lines, residential service, and contact centers with live agents. It is not a tool for evading call-authentication or robocall rules, and it is the wrong fit for short-duration or high-volume dialer traffic.
Canadian carriers are more stringent about call quality than just about anywhere. Upstream wholesale carriers in Canada watch answer-seizure ratio (ASR) and average call duration (ACD) closely; short-duration and suspicious traffic gets flagged and cut off quickly. That is a feature, not a bug — it keeps the route clean. Our upstream partners are fully STIR/SHAKEN compliant, and we do not onboard traffic designed to evade caller-ID authentication.
In March 2026, the FCC issued a Final Determination Order cutting Belthrough LLC off from all US networks — just 3 weeks after the initial order. In the same month, the FCC ordered 35 companies to cure RMD deficiencies or face removal. Removal from the RMD is effectively a death sentence: no other US provider may accept your traffic.
The FCC's Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements for number assignments have made DID reselling significantly harder. Carriers must verify end-user identity before assigning numbers, maintain records, and respond to traceback requests within tight deadlines. Non-compliance triggers RMD removal and cease-and-desist orders.
The USF contribution factor exceeded 36.6% in recent quarters — meaning carriers pay over a third of their interstate/international revenue to the Universal Service Fund. In September 2025, even Vonage was hit with enforcement for USF reporting violations. This applies to all 214 carriers, including international-only and LIRE-exempt.
On March 20, 2026, the FCC debarred 7 individuals in a single day from participating in FCC programs. In December 2025, Issa Asad of Q Link Wireless was debarred. Officers and principals of carriers now face personal debarment, not just corporate penalties.
In January 2026, the FCC settled its first-ever enforcement case for Team Telecom mitigation agreement violations (Marlink, $175,000 penalty). China Telecom Americas had its 214 license revoked entirely. Foreign-owned 214 applicants face 6-12+ month reviews and mandatory network security agreements.
VoIP.ms is a Canadian VoIP provider (Montreal, QC) that sells US phone numbers (DIDs), SMS, and voice services to customers throughout the United States and internationally — all while operating under CRTC jurisdiction, not the FCC. +
This structure is built for legitimate, longer-duration conversational voice — UCaaS, hosted PBX, business lines, residential service, and contact centers with live agents. It is not a tool for evading call-authentication or robocall rules, and it is the wrong fit for short-duration or high-volume dialer traffic.
Canadian carriers are more stringent about call quality than just about anywhere. Upstream wholesale carriers in Canada watch answer-seizure ratio (ASR) and average call duration (ACD) closely; short-duration and suspicious traffic gets flagged and cut off quickly. That is a feature, not a bug — it keeps the route clean. Our upstream partners are fully STIR/SHAKEN compliant, and we do not onboard traffic designed to evade caller-ID authentication.
In March 2026, the FCC issued a Final Determination Order cutting Belthrough LLC off from all US networks — just 3 weeks after the initial order. In the same month, the FCC ordered 35 companies to cure RMD deficiencies or face removal. Removal from the RMD is effectively a death sentence: no other US provider may accept your traffic.
The FCC's Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements for number assignments have made DID reselling significantly harder. Carriers must verify end-user identity before assigning numbers, maintain records, and respond to traceback requests within tight deadlines. Non-compliance triggers RMD removal and cease-and-desist orders.
The USF contribution factor exceeded 36.6% in recent quarters — meaning carriers pay over a third of their interstate/international revenue to the Universal Service Fund. In September 2025, even Vonage was hit with enforcement for USF reporting violations. This applies to all 214 carriers, including international-only and LIRE-exempt.
On March 20, 2026, the FCC debarred 7 individuals in a single day from participating in FCC programs. In December 2025, Issa Asad of Q Link Wireless was debarred. Officers and principals of carriers now face personal debarment, not just corporate penalties.
In January 2026, the FCC settled its first-ever enforcement case for Team Telecom mitigation agreement violations (Marlink, $175,000 penalty). China Telecom Americas had its 214 license revoked entirely. Foreign-owned 214 applicants face 6-12+ month reviews and mandatory network security agreements.
VoIP.ms is a Canadian VoIP provider (Montreal, QC) that sells US phone numbers (DIDs), SMS, and voice services to customers throughout the United States and internationally — all while operating under CRTC jurisdiction, not the FCC.
Iristel (Markham, ON) is another example — a Canadian CLEC operating in 70+ countries with offices in the US, Romania, Moldova, Kenya, and Norway. They provide wholesale voice termination, international DID numbers, and MVNO solutions globally, all from their Canadian carrier base.
Fibernetics (Cambridge, ON) is a Canadian wholesale voice and data provider offering SIP trunking, hosted PBX white-label, and DID origination across Canada and the US. They are a popular upstream choice for Canadian resellers needing reliable wholesale voice termination and number provisioning.