Backup Header Below

Use your smartphone as a landline: How it works without DECT

Can you use your smartphone as a landline phone? This is a valid question because fewer and fewer people still have a DECT phone at home, but do happen to 'own' one or more phone numbers via their Internet provider. We will show you how you can set up your smartphone as a landline phone.

Why would anyone want to do that, you ask? The most obvious reason is to make use of your landline number on your smartphone. After all, you already have a flat-rate call plan for your landline, but not for your smartphone. This way, you can chat for hours on end at home without a guilty conscience or racking up an insane phone bill at the end of the month.

But there are other possibilities in doing so. You will need a phone number for services like Telegram or WhatsApp and yet refuse to use your mobile number, so what other choices have you? You might as well ‘sacrifice’ your ‘probably orphaned’ landline number in this case, as the registration normally works even without the need for SMS as it reads out a code.

Using your smartphone as a landline phone: Requirements

Probably the biggest hurdle in the entire undertaking of using your “smartphone as landline phone” is the router. You need a DSL router that supports VoIP and also a suitable app for either Android or iPhone platforms. As you can see in the following table, the selection is unfortunately a very small one:

Smartphone as landline phone: Supported apps

Manufacturer Status Android app iPhone app

AVM (FritzBox) Available Fritz!AppFon Fritz!AppFon

TP-Link Available tpPhone ipPhone

Instructions: Setting up your smartphone as a landline phone

Note: Current mobile phones don’t support DECT, so you cannot register them as a DECT phone on your router like a regular cordless phone and get started. Instead, you’ll have to rely on your router’s manufacturer to provide a corresponding app. We will talk about alternatives later.

If you have a router from AVM or TP-Link, the setup is a simple process. First, you will need to download the corresponding app for your smartphone as provided in the links above. In our case, we will demonstrate using the Fritz!AppFon app.

Download the app, select FritzBox in the WLAN, grant permissions – and you’re good to go / © NextPit

Setting up the app took us less than five minutes to complete the process. After downloading, you simply need to follow the instructions as shown on the display. The only stumbling block is that Fritz!AppFon will ask you for a username and password during the setup process, where typically you only have one password to log into the router.

The solution is simple: You will only have to create a user in the web interface of the FritzBox under System and FritzBox User .

Once you have created a user account and granted the appropriate permission for calls, you’re ready to go / © NextPit

After that, everything else is self-explanatory. You will have a dialer in the app and can enter a phone number and begin to call. If you have the appropriate permissions enabled, you can also access your regular phone book here.

Talking to myself: I can call myself from my landline (left) on my mobile (middle), doing so from a single device. The future is now! / © NextPit

Depending on the router and the app you’re using, there are a number of settings to take note of. Today, for instance, I discovered that my Internet plan includes three landline numbers, between which I can rotate. In addition, the Fritz!AppFon offers an answering machine and anonymous calling features.

Depending on the hardware and app, you have different options (left, middle). What’s great for iOS: Calls made via landline will also appear in the call history under “Recents” (right) / © NextPit

Alternative: Smartphone via SIP as landline phone

There is an alternative and far more complex method of using your smartphone as a landline phone. You can also ‘transport’ the landline to your smartphone via SIP. The effort required is greater, but you can use your landline number while you are on the move and, theoretically, even when you are abroad. Are you interested in this topic? If so, we look forward to your feedback in the comments!

Source: https://www.nextpit.com/how-to-use-your-smartphone-as-a-landline

Other Press Releases