Ooma Telo Air VoIP Free Internet Home Phone Service with Wireless Connectivity. Affordable landline replacement. Unlimited nationwide calling. Call on the go with free mobile… by ooma
$119.99 Original price was: $119.99.$109.00Current price is: $109.00.
Top Pick — discover the Ooma Telo Air VoIP Free Internet Home Phone Service with Wireless Connectivity. Affordable landline replacement. Unlimited nationwide calling. Call on the go with free mobile… by ooma, built for performance and designed for life in the United States.
About Ooma Telo Air VoIP Free Internet Home Phone Service with Wireless Connectivity. Affordable landline replacement. Unlimited nationwide calling. Call on the go with free mobile…
- Ooma has been rated the top phone service by Consumer Reports.
- Built-in wireless connectivity to place your Ooma Telo anywhere in your home. Works only in the US.
- Crystal-clear nationwide calling for free and low international rates. Pay only monthly applicable taxes and fees.
- Take your home phone on the go with the easy-to-use Ooma Home Phone mobile app
- Includes unlimited calling in the US, voicemail, caller-ID, call-waiting, 911 calling and text alerts.
- Tap into VoIP home phone service with Starlink internet.
The Ooma Telo Air VoIP Free Internet Home Phone Service with Wireless Connectivity. Affordable landline replacement. Unlimited nationwide calling. Call on the go with free mobile… by ooma combines reliability, modern design, and user-focused engineering. Perfect for everyday use, it delivers trusted results for American customers who value quality.
Specification: Ooma Telo Air VoIP Free Internet Home Phone Service with Wireless Connectivity. Affordable landline replacement. Unlimited nationwide calling. Call on the go with free mobile… by ooma
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2207 reviews for Ooma Telo Air VoIP Free Internet Home Phone Service with Wireless Connectivity. Affordable landline replacement. Unlimited nationwide calling. Call on the go with free mobile… by ooma
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$119.99 Original price was: $119.99.$109.00Current price is: $109.00.
Breadtruck –
Was a customer of the “V” online call service since 2014, but making the switch to chase better prices. I don’t use any special services, just wanted basic landline service, so why keep paying for anything more than that?
This Ooma system works good.
Setup was easy, although annoying how Ooma can’t seem to accept my address as I enter it. They say it is not legitimate, but Id think I know my own address.
Call quality is okay, but not exactly impressive. It has been sorta static-filled, not as clear as I’d expect, especially for a system with all the newest technology packed into it to take advantage of my great Internet service (as compared to what I had in 2014).
Still, my goal was to have calls for the lowest cost, so the Ooma unit follows through on that.
François –
I have saved hundreds of dollars using the Ooma voip telephone system.since 2012. I have had one unit fail after the warranty period, and the Speaker fail on another Unit which was replaced under warranty without a problem. I have found their Customer Service to be excellent. the Telo Air 2 wi-fi is excellent and the hds 3 handsets are very nice and efficient . I especially like the portability of the Ooma system. I use it in Florida and in Canada.
Sound quality could use improvement for me to give 5 Stars. but I am more than satisfied with this product..
Pamela –
Love the service. So far it works great. Have had it for about 3 months and no issues. Clarity is amazing. Easy setup. Had a porting issue and it was resolved quickly. Had another major provider before and this is night and day with way better quality voice service. And it’s cheaper. Great connectivity with wireless.
JGolsonel –
Do not mistake this for the Telo Air 1. This can be taken anywhere and set up wirelessly as only the second version can. The 1 & 2 look identical. Be careful with the description because if it does not say Air 2 it is not the true wireless version. I think some other people selling the original Telo honestly don’t understand the difference. And it’s truly the manufacturer’s fault because the company should have made the upgraded version the (Telo Air 2) look different in some kind of way so that it could be easy to recognize. I had the (Telo #1) and sent it back and order this (Telo air 2). The first version (the 1#) has to be connected to a Wi-Fi box or modem to get service. The second version this device (the Telo air 2#) does not have to be connected into a WiFi box or modem. The benefit of having the second version is that you can connect to any Wi-Fi anywhere so you can take your setup anywhere. Also, some people are saying on other sites and blogs that if you get (Telo 1#) you will not be able to pick which plans you want to stay on. Both Telo devices offer a 60 day free trail with there premier service. Premier service is awesome do your research I’m not going to explain everything here. After the 60 days is up you have to decide if you want to keep it or not. You do have to pay the taxes on your free service, that fee for your state is mandatory no matter what. So that’s about $6 a month or $7.27 a month if your in NYC like me. You cannot get around paying taxes but the premier service is optional it’s an additional charge that you can choose to not have after your 60 day free trail is up. The premier service cost $9.99 a month. So if you keep the premier service in total you will be paying about $16 or $17.27 a month if your in NYC like me. And it’s worth it to me because I get to have two phone numbers if I want them and I do. Friends and family get one number.. business related stuff get the other number. I now have the (Telo air 2) and I plan on keeping the premier service. I did ask the customer service representative at Telo if I could have a basic package of free service by paying the taxes only and no premiere service on the (Telo 1#) and he said yes it’s possible. But I wouldn’t know because I returned mine. But you can try it at your own risk but I have seen a lot of other people who have purchased the (Telo 1#) reviews and they are saying that they are being forced to pay state taxes and the premier fee together. Me, I have a choice with the (Telo air 2#) I brought mines on Amazon for $99.
My personal opinion. If you have teenagers like me and I homeschool one of them at his request because he has a disability and I’m also Christian.. having home phone service could be golden. I can limit my kids screen time whenever I want and I can still allow them to talk on the phone with their friends and of course contact them if I’m not home. No smart phone at night = no looking up porn. And parental controls on laptops and smart TVs also helps me to filter out unwanted content. Having a (Telo air 2 #) means I get to take my same *in the house wholesome values* on the road to hotels, camping trips, grandmas house or anywhere WiFi is available and phones are needed. Both devices are also answering machines. They have a flashing light to let you know you have a message waiting. I brought a 3 piece phone package from Amazon refurbished home phones sets for $35 and the phones work great and look new. All in at $135 for peace of mind and structure. My kids are allowed to have there cell phones and Hulu or whatever during the daytime after school work is done because I can monitor what they’re doing but not overnight when I’m sleeping or not home.
“dbperso” –
Unlike the Telo non-Air unit on Amazon, this one can’t be activated in Canada (as others have said) without using a US address. However, that won’t work if you want a Canadian phone number.
I purchased a Telo Air directly from Telo, and it (like the Telo non-Air from Amazon) both activate with Canadian addresses and permit Canadian phone numbers.
The product is fine, I’m sure, but I can’t imagine why you’d come to amazon.ca to buy a US unit.
Barry Mottershead –
Fonctionne parfaitement en autant que l internet est stable la moindre variation de l internet et le téléphone coupe
Arrowcatcher –
A large old school answering machine form factor is a superficial issue with the Ooma Telo Air 2 for starters. Ooma is a major VOIP provider, so I thought I’d give it a try.
The Ooma’s continuous power consumption of 3-4 watts is annoying. That’s 26.4 to 35.2 kWh total in a year. I had gone around the house getting rid of wall wart parasitic power consumers, and then I get the Ooma. For comparison, the magicJack phone adapter draws 1 watt, and the Voiply draws 0 watts (unmeasurable) when idle and 1 watt when active on a call. First clue of a power consumption issue is that the Ooma box gets warm to the touch. The Ooma box is not modern technology “green”.
Those are relatively minor issues. More significantly, the Ooma box always takes at least 4.5 minutes to boot from a power-off restart. I shut down my IT room nightly, so I immediately noticed this. If you have a power outage, your phone service is out for at least 4.5 minutes on power restoration. In contrast, my magicJack adapter restarts in 17 seconds and the Voiply in 1.1 minutes. These devices are all connected to my 1Gbps fiber broadband.
But here’s the really bad news: frequent power-off restarts may damage the Ooma Telo Air 2 file system. After about 15 or so restarts, the box becomes erratic with long reboot times – 10 to 30 minutes – and sudden midday service drop-offs. Performance can be restored with a factory reset, a somewhat onerous complex procedure either involving connection of a laptop to the Ooma box or a sequence of button pushing. You can reduce the chances of this happening by using the $50 battery backup that Ooma offers. Whatever the case, after 15 or so power-off reboots, you may need to do a factory reset, which is much more complicated on the Telo Air 2 than the common scenario of sticking a paper clip end in a little hole. My frequent Ooma reboots evidently revealed a potential stability issue that most conventional users won’t immediately notice.
The Basic service is not actually free. There are taxes and fees which in my case totaled $6.70 monthly. The Basic services are very limited with lots of promotional nagging to do an additional $10/month Premier subscription for a total of about $17/month. More expensive than competitors magicJack and Voiply. As well magicJack offers SMS full-service texting while Ooma and Voiply do not.
On the plus side, Ooma gave me a very cool phone number. I was able to easily port it to Voiply with no Ooma snags. Number ports are free on Voiply but cost $40 into Ooma. You must call Ooma customer support to cancel service, where I engaged the most aggressive customer retention rep ever. It was to no avail despite the cool concessions she offered. The number had already been ported away. Ooma seems desperate not to lose subscriber head count. I was an Ooma customer for 71 days.
Especially due to the noted Ooma system instabilities and issues plus excess parasitic power consumption. Ooma seems to be a mediocre product – a comparatively poor service value as a home phone.
Islander –
1/ I had problems with settings and factory reset
2/ I sent it back in june as Ooma told me to do and Ooma always spam me (even by phone) to make me pay service from june. Now they even threaten me this faulse balance being turned over to their collections department.
SCAMMERS!
Arrowcatcher –
When I received this Ooma device I went to work setting it up- turns out the one I had was set up for a US system. I attempted to set it up with my Lap Top- advice- Don’t. Once I used a cell phone- scanned the code and waiting about 45 minutes – it was up and running. It has great sound quality. My problems setting up the system was more Shaw related than Ooma. I’m not who Shaw is hiring for Tech Support but the one lady I spoke with didn’t even know what an Ethernet Cable was.