What is a PBX?

A PBX is a private branch exchange — the phone system that routes calls inside a business. Modern PBXes are cloud-hosted software; older ones were on-site hardware boxes.

Written By Catherine Weir

Last updated About 2 hours ago

A PBX (short for private branch exchange) is the phone system that routes calls inside a business. It connects your phones to each other, connects your business to the outside phone network, and handles all the call-handling features your business uses — extensions, hold, transfer, auto attendant, voicemail, call queues, and so on.

Every business with more than one phone has some form of PBX. It may be a physical box in a server closet (older setups), a managed service from a cloud provider like RingCentral or Zoom Phone, or a lightweight software layer from a mobile-first platform.

The three generations of PBX

Traditional PBX / on-premise PBX — a physical appliance in your office that connects to landlines from your phone company. Dominant from the 1960s through the 2000s. Still common in older industrial and government environments.

IP PBX — an on-premise or hybrid system that routes calls over IP (usually SIP) but still lives on your network. A generational bridge between traditional and cloud.

Cloud PBX / hosted PBX / UCaaS — the PBX lives entirely in the cloud. Your phones register to it over the internet. No hardware on your side. This is what most new deployments look like — RingCentral, Zoom Phone, 8x8, Nextiva, Microsoft Teams Phone, Webex Calling, etc.

What a PBX does

  • Delivers incoming calls to the right extension, group, or queue

  • Routes outgoing calls through your carrier(s)

  • Provides auto attendants, IVR, and voicemail

  • Manages call queues and hold music

  • Records calls (optionally, with compliance controls)

  • Integrates with other business tools (CRM, calendar, helpdesk)

  • Provides analytics on call volumes, durations, and outcomes

How AI voice agents fit with a PBX

AI voice agents usually don't replace your PBX — they plug into it. The most common deployment patterns:

  • Call forwarding — your PBX forwards specific calls (all calls, after-hours calls, overflow calls) to the AI agent

  • SIP integration — advanced setups route calls directly from your PBX to the AI via SIP trunk

  • API triggered calls — the AI agent makes outbound calls initiated by your PBX or CRM for reminders and follow-ups

The PBX stays in place. The AI agent becomes another destination the PBX can route to.

Do I still need a PBX if I use an AI voice agent?

It depends on your team size and phone needs.

  • Solo business or micro-team: often not — the AI agent plus forwarding from a single business number is enough

  • Small team: usually yes, for internal extensions, transfers, and team availability

  • Larger business: definitely yes — the PBX handles your human calls; the AI handles specific scenarios

Related concepts

See it in action

The Receptionist Agent at 365agents works with every major cloud PBX. Forward your calls and the agent picks up. Our Call forwarding collection has step-by-step setup guides for RingCentral, Zoom Phone, 8x8, Nextiva, Webex Calling, Teams Phone, Vonage, and more.