What is call routing?

Call routing is the logic a phone system uses to decide where an incoming call should go — which person, department, AI agent, voicemail, or external number. Smart call routing uses context to send the right calls to the right destination.

Written By Catherine Weir

Last updated About 1 hour ago

Call routing is the logic a phone system uses to decide where an incoming call should go — which person, department, AI agent, voicemail, or external number answers the call. Every business phone system does some form of call routing, from the simplest "ring this desk phone" to complex rule-based decisions that consider time of day, caller identity, call volume, and agent availability.

Good call routing is what separates a phone system that delights callers from one that frustrates them.

The dimensions call routing can consider

  • Time — business hours, after hours, holidays, specific date ranges

  • Caller identity — known customer vs. new lead vs. unknown number; VIP list; do-not-call list

  • Intent — why the caller is calling (detected by an AI agent, an IVR prompt, or the number the caller dialed)

  • Team state — who's available, what the current call queue looks like, whether a specific agent is already on a call

  • Priority — VIPs, urgent issues, current customers vs. prospects

  • Language / location — routing by language preference or geographic region

Types of call routing

  • Direct routing — a caller dials an extension and the call goes there

  • Menu routing — the caller selects from an auto attendant or IVR menu

  • Round-robin routing — incoming calls cycle through a pool of agents

  • Skills-based routing — calls go to the best-matched agent based on skills, language, or account ownership

  • Time-based routing — calls go to different destinations based on time of day or day of week

  • Overflow routing — calls spill to a secondary destination when the primary is unavailable

  • Smart / AI-based routing — an AI listens to the first few seconds of the call, identifies intent, and routes accordingly

Traditional routing vs. AI-enabled routing

Traditional call routing requires the caller to adapt to the system — press the right menu option, dial the right extension, know who to ask for. AI-enabled routing flips it: the caller explains what they need in their own words, and the AI routes the call appropriately. The caller never has to know how your business is organized internally.

  • Traditional: "Press 1 for sales. Press 2 for service. Press 3 for billing."

  • AI-enabled: "Hi, thanks for calling. How can I help?" — and the AI routes based on the answer

What smart routing unlocks

  • Lost calls become completed calls — the AI handles what it can and routes the rest

  • VIPs get skipped past queues automatically

  • Urgent calls escalate instantly rather than waiting in line

  • Staffing becomes more efficient — humans only handle calls that actually need them

  • Analytics get dramatically better because routing decisions are captured with context

Related concepts

See it in action

The Receptionist Agent at 365agents combines front-door AI with smart routing rules — the AI handles what it can, escalates what it can't, and uses context (caller identity, time of day, call intent) to send the rest to the right person on your team.