Hidden costs of business phone leasing

a phone with a banknote with an upward sign indicating a growing cost of business phone system leasing

Table of contents

Picking a business phone system can be a real pain. The telecoms market is crowded with providers, resellers, and sub-resellers. They all offer products that sound similar at almost similar prices. Most small business owners have no easy way to compare them properly. 

So most of the time, buyers go with a name they heard from someone in their industry, or whoever called first and seemed credible.

That is a reasonable response to a confusing market. The problem is that the industry rewards aggressive selling. The gap between a quoted monthly fee and the real cost of a contract can be enormous. Most owners don’t find out until they are already locked in.

We asked business owners in the UK and US about their experiences. The same pattern came back every time. Low quoted costs, long hidden contract terms, and exit penalties that make leaving nearly impossible.

We asked business owners in the UK and US about their experiences. The same pattern came back every time. Low quoted costs, long hidden contract terms, and exit penalties that make leaving nearly impossible.

The scale of the problem

A 2025 BBC investigation spoke to more than 160 small businesses trapped in expensive phone equipment agreements. The most striking case involved a business owner facing a bill of £54,432 over ten years for just five phones, with a £24,000 exit penalty. 

Independent experts said the fees were much higher than they should be, and the contract was set up to benefit the provider, not the customer.

How do these deals work?

The sales pitch focuses on a short contract and a low monthly figure. Often, the service contract is described as two years. 

What is not mentioned is that the hardware is funded through a separate finance agreement with a third-party leasing company. That agreement can run for 60, 72 or even 84 months.

The Promise

The Reality

Some customers get cashback or rebates for the first year or two. Legal specialists say that money typically comes from the inflated cost of the lease itself. It is your own money returned early to make the deal look attractive. When the introductory period ends, the real cost appears.

This UK case shows exactly how this plays out. A new owner, who bought a hair salon, discovered the previous owner had been signed into a 7-year agreement with a well-known UK service provider. 

The equipment lease alone totalled £22,174.80 for four phones. When the new owner tried to exit, the combined termination fees across all three agreements came to over £10,500.

The monthly payment trap

We asked business owners to share their experiences. The story goes pretty much the same. 

Ruben Medina, Head of Marketing and Sales at Koalendar, described what happened to his US team in 2023.

man speaking on the headphones

Ruben Medina

Head of Marketing and Sales, Koalendar


A reseller promised '$89/month per line'...

A reseller promised '$89/month per line' for a cloud solution with desk phones for our five-person team. What we didn't know was that it was a 60-month lease. The reseller avoided telling us the total cost of the contract, focusing instead on monthly costs and assuring us that the promotion price would expire on Friday.

Ruben’s team signed for five lines at $445 per month. Total contract value: $26,700. The same equipment bought outright would have cost $2,500. They later added three more lines, bringing total committed spend to $42,720. The buy-plus-VoIP alternative would have cost around $12,000 over five years. The difference was $30,000.

Patricia Curts, Managing Director of The Mexican Collection in the UK, had a near-identical experience. 

woman portrait headshot

Patricia Curts

Managing Director, The Mexican Collection


The salesman had quoted me £35 a month which seemed reasonable enough but then I actually read the contract.

Buried inside was a five-year term, getting our total past £2,100 for equipment that would cost about £400 to buy outright. The pressure to sign fast was real, and those details are buried precisely because they're meant to be missed.

Leasing vs buying: Cost comparison

Here is what the numbers look like across two scenarios, based on real cases. 

a table comparing the costs of leasing vs buying a business phone system
US figures based on Koalendar case. UK figures based on BBC investigation. Individual cases will vary.

What happens when you try to exit

Chris Roy, Product and Marketing Director at Reclaim247, explains why the pattern keeps repeating. 

a headshot photo of a man

Chris Roy

Product and Marketing Director, Reclaim247


These deals still happen because of how the sales funnel is designed.

They're laser-focused on conversion, signing up fast and anchoring decisions around monthly prices instead of total value.

In the US, equipment leases often require 50 to 75 percent of the remaining contract value on early exit. In the UK, the BBC found some contracts required 100 percent.

Roy puts it plainly: businesses end up stuck paying fixed costs for equipment they no longer need, with less money left to operate and react.

Why are small businesses easy targets?

Large companies have procurement teams and legal advisers. Small businesses usually have one person making the decision under time pressure. That is exactly what these sales tactics rely on.

woman portrait headshot

Patricia Curts

Managing Director, The Mexican Collection


We're time-poor and usually the only person in the room...

Small businesses become the target because we're time-poor and usually the only person in the room. Most owners don't realise the real cost until months in, by which point they're already locked in.

Tom Terronez, CEO of Medix Dental IT, manages IT for dental practices across the US and sees it regularly.

a headshot of a man in business suit

Tom Terronez

CEO, Medix Dental IT


Get every extra charge written down before you sign anything...

Salespeople rushed us through new features but skipped the fee details. Then the recurring charges and maintenance costs piled up. Get every extra charge written down before you sign anything.

Six warning signs before you sign

Three questions to ask before you sign

VoIP solution for businesses

All of the problems in this article come from the same place. A pricing structure built to hide the real cost. That is not a feature of business phone systems in general. It is a feature of hardware leasing models.

With VoIPstudio, there is no hardware to finance and no leasing company involved. The service runs on devices your team already owns. There is no separate finance agreement in the small print. Pricing is monthly with no long-term contract. Add users when you grow, cancel when you need to. Every new customer gets a 30-day free trial.

Call recording, voicemail to email, IVR menus, and CRM integrations with Salesforce, HubSpot, Zoho and other popular CRMs are all included as standard.

Tashlien Nunn, CEO of Apps Plus, put it simply after her own experience with a leasing deal. 

a woman headshot

Tashlien Nunn

CEO of Apps Plus


Run the math yourself.

Compare buying versus financing and get every cost in writing. Don't just take their word for the total price.

How to avoid getting locked in

The phone on your desk is not an expensive item. The cost in most of these cases came from the contract attached to it. The 60 to 84-month term. The fees that jumped after an introductory period. The separate finance company buried in the paperwork.

Just make sure you understand the total cost before you commit to anything.

woman portrait headshot

Patricia Curts

Managing Director, The Mexican Collection


Being locked into years of payments for something you could have bought outright for a fraction of the cost is the part that lingers longest.

Contributors

Quotes in this article were ontained directly from small business owners. Contributors: Patricia Curts (The Mexican Collection), Tom Terronez (Medix Dental IT), Ruben Medina (Koalendar), Chris Roy (Reclaim247), and Tashlien Nunn (Apps Plus). BBC investigation, originally reported by Caroline Bilton.

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1. Download .deb package

				
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