
If this step is done correctly, the porting of your numbers should be seamless. This is an important step, because you'll want your phone numbers to ring through correctly whenever the port completes. This will allow you plenty of time to set the number up correctly in your PBX via the admin portal. When you've submitted all of your paperwork properly, we'll add the phone numbers to our switch and your OnSIP account. All you'll need to do is sign and date the form in one or two places and get it back to us via fax or email it to Please send faxes to 21 and remember to include your LNP case number on the fax. We'll do the hard part and fill out the LOA for you using the information from your phone bill copy/CSR. If the billing address on your phone bill is different from the address where your service is installed (service address), you will need to to provide us with both addresses.Īfter we receive your phone bill, we then follow-up with a second email that will have a Letter of Authorization (LOA) attached for your signature.

Without either a phone bill or a CSR, no carrier will be able to port a number.ģ. The CSR will show the carrier, the customer name and billing address, and the phone numbers belonging to the customer. Per FCC mandate, any and all carriers must provide a CSR upon demand. You can request this from your current carrier. The only other acceptable document is a CSR (Customer Service Record). If you can't acquire a current copy phone bill, you could go to your online account and print out the account information that is required.Ģ. Note that the phone bill will NOT be accepted if it has been more than 30 days from the billing/invoice date on the bill (not the pay by date).ġ. Your port request could come to a screeching halt at this very moment if you submit a bill copy that's missing any one of the above listed requirements. This is where your attention to detail will really make or break it! You will need to submit a copy of your current phone bill that includes all of the following: the customer/business name, billing/service address, and most importantly, the phone numbers to be ported - circled, please. Once we receive your porting request, we'll confirm that your numbers can be ported, and then send you an email requesting your most recent phone bill from your current provider. Once you've read and completed the form, click "request" for the process to begin. It's here that you'll enter the phone number(s) you wish to port along with some basic contact information. From the "Account" page, click the "Port an existing phone number" link to open the LNP form (LNP = Local Number Portability).

To get things started, you'll need to send us your port request from within the OnSIP admin portal. In this blog, we'll explain the process and provide you with some tips to ensure everything goes as smoothly as possible. So you're ready to port your phone number into OnSIP, but don't know where to begin? It's actually really easy to do and just requires a few steps.
