Voice gateways play a pivotal role in hybrid communication environments where analogue and IP-based systems must coexist.
These gateways translate signalling and media formats between disparate networks, most commonly between TDM (used in PSTN) and IP-based protocols like SIP and RTP. Voice gateways are essential for enterprises migrating to VoIP while maintaining connectivity with traditional carriers or legacy PBX systems.
Depending on the deployment scale, they come as standalone appliances or integrated modules within routers.
Typical functionalities include codec translation, fax relay support, call routing, number manipulation, and sometimes session border control. In environments requiring high availability, voice gateways may support failover capabilities and redundancy.
On the security front, they often offer a firewall, NAT traversal, and SRTP support. High-capacity gateways can handle thousands of simultaneous calls, making them suitable for large contact centres or telecom operators.
Their ability to bridge digital and analogue realms ensures business continuity during transitions and enables flexible routing strategies, including least-cost routing and time-based routing policies.
