They all list the same brands, recite the same feature bullets, and end with the same vague conclusion that "the best platform depends on your needs."
That's not wrong. It's just not helpful.
Here's what business owners actually need to know: which platform handles two-way conversations like a real channel, which integrates with your CRM without breaking, which one is honest about pricing once you add the features you'll need, and which one will keep your messages out of the carrier spam filter.
This guide compares seven business text messaging services, but it spends most of its time on the criteria that separate good from forgettable. Whether you run a 12-person HVAC company, a dental practice with three locations, or a 500-seat B2B sales team, the questions are similar. The platform has to do the boring parts right.
A business text messaging service lets companies send and receive SMS (and usually MMS, sometimes RCS) from a dedicated business number, at scale, without anyone using a personal phone. The good ones add automation, two-way conversations, CRM integrations, contact segmentation, and analytics.
The market has grown fast. The hard part isn't finding a platform. It's finding one that fits your business without paying for features you'll never use, or hitting a wall the moment you grow.
This is the part most "best of" lists skip.
Most platforms can blast messages. Far fewer handle two-way conversations cleanly. If you want SMS to feel like a real channel, the kind customers actually engage with, your team needs a shared inbox that tracks conversations the way a help desk does. Threads, assignment, internal notes, search.
If you're doing appointment confirmations, sales follow-ups, or customer service over SMS, the inbox is the product. Test it before signing up.
Plenty of platforms list "1,000+ integrations" on their homepage. Most are Zapier middleware, which adds latency, breaks under load, and costs extra. A serious business needs native integrations with the tools its team already uses: HubSpot, Salesforce, Pipedrive, ActiveCampaign, Slack.
Native means data flows in real time, fields map cleanly, and triggers fire without you setting up middleware in between.
US businesses can't just buy a phone number and start texting at volume. You need to register your brand and campaign with The Campaign Registry through your provider. The right platform walks you through this without making you Google what 10DLC means. Opt-in capture and STOP keyword processing should be automatic.
Skip this and carriers will throttle or block your messages within days.
The 98% open rate everyone quotes is real, but only on messages that actually get delivered. Carrier filtering is aggressive for senders that don't follow rules. The right provider has direct carrier relationships and tells you when something fails, with reasons.
Watch for charges layered on top of "per message" rates: number rental, automation tier upgrades, MMS premiums, integration fees, AI features. Some "starts at $25" platforms cost three times that once you add what you actually need.
For most businesses, the difference between "we'll think about it" and "we'll try it" comes down to how quickly they can get a number provisioned, send a test message, and connect their CRM. Setup time still varies wildly across the platforms in this list.
Sakari is built for businesses that want SMS to do real work, not just exist as a channel. Sales, marketing, customer service, and operations teams use it to send messages, run automated workflows, and hold two-way conversations through a shared inbox.
The platform handles SMS, MMS, RCS, WhatsApp, voice, and email from one place. That matters more than it sounds. Customer threads stay in context even when they cross channels, and you stop maintaining separate tools for each one. The Sakari AI chatbot handles inbound replies automatically when you want it to, and the workflow builder triggers messages based on activity in connected tools like HubSpot, Salesforce, Pipedrive, ActiveCampaign, and Slack.
What it's good at:
Pricing: Starts at $25 per month. Free 14-day trial available.
Best for: Mid-sized service businesses, sales teams, marketing operations, customer service teams, and any company running multi-channel campaigns or international SMS.
Emotive is built almost entirely for e-commerce. It plugs into Shopify and Magento, runs SMS marketing campaigns for online stores, and bundles conversational features around cart abandonment and product recommendations.
The trade-off is narrow scope. If you sell online and live in Shopify, it works. If you run a service business, manage a B2B sales pipeline, or send messages outside the US and Canada, it's the wrong fit.
What it's good at:
Pricing: Starts at $100 per month.
Best for: Direct-to-consumer e-commerce brands focused on promotions and cart recovery.
SimpleTexting is a steady, mid-market option. It handles mass texting, drip campaigns, and basic two-way messaging well, with a clean interface that doesn't take much training to learn.
Depth isn't its strength. If you need conditional workflow branching, multi-channel campaigns, or heavy CRM integration, you'll outgrow it. For straightforward SMS marketing, it's solid.
What it's good at:
Pricing: Starts at $39 per month.
Best for: Small to mid-sized businesses with relatively simple SMS marketing needs.
SlickText sits in the same lane as SimpleTexting. It's built for SMB-friendly SMS marketing: list building, mass texting, basic reporting, light automation.
Its "Text to Join" keyword features are well-developed, which makes SlickText popular with retail shops, restaurants, and gyms running loyalty programs or short keyword campaigns.
What it's good at:
Pricing: Starts at $29 per month.
Best for: Local businesses running keyword campaigns and growing SMS subscriber lists.
EZ Texting positions itself as the easiest entry point into SMS marketing. The interface is approachable and the learning curve is short.
The flip side is depth. Features are basic compared to others on this list. Automation, integrations, and two-way conversation tools all lag behind. It's a starter platform, and many businesses graduate from it once they need more.
What it's good at:
Pricing: Starts at $20 per month.
Best for: Businesses brand new to SMS marketing that want a low-friction start.
Klaviyo is an email marketing platform that added SMS. If you already run email through Klaviyo and you sell e-commerce, the SMS add-on keeps customer data in one place and supports cross-channel campaigns.
The catch is that it's e-commerce-first, and the SMS side feels secondary to the email engine. For service businesses, B2B sales teams, or anyone outside the Shopify world, the fit gets awkward fast.
What it's good at:
Pricing: Email plus SMS starting around $60 per month.
Best for: E-commerce brands already invested in Klaviyo for email.
TextMagic is a no-frills SMS platform. Send texts, receive replies, manage contacts. That's the product.
What it lacks is automation depth, native integrations, and modern analytics. It's a pay-as-you-go tool for businesses with small message volume and simple needs.
What it's good at:
Pricing: Pay-as-you-go starting around $24.50 per 500 texts.
Best for: Small businesses sending occasional texts without recurring campaigns.
The right platform comes down to five questions.
HVAC, plumbing, pest control, and electrical companies use SMS for appointment confirmations, technician ETA notifications, post-service follow-ups, and review requests. The use case is dense: a typical job has three or four natural SMS moments, and the right platform automates all of them off CRM and field service triggers.
A pest control company might send a confirmation 24 hours before a quarterly service, an "on the way" text from the technician, a follow-up with the inspection report, and an annual renewal reminder. Done well, this drives both retention and review volume.
Dental and medical offices rely on SMS for appointment reminders, confirmations, and recall messaging. The hard part is integrating with practice management software and handling the privacy side correctly. Healthcare SMS typically uses shorter, more careful messages, and the right platform supports tagging and segmentation by patient type or visit history.
Hotels use SMS for booking confirmations, check-in instructions, in-stay requests, and post-stay review prompts. The most effective programs treat SMS as concierge service, not just notifications. A guest texting the front desk for extra towels is faster than calling, and it lifts satisfaction scores meaningfully when handled right.
Property managers use SMS for rent reminders, maintenance updates, and resident-wide communication. SMS is especially valuable for emergencies. A water main break in a 200-unit building gets answered faster by SMS than by any other channel.
Law firms, accounting practices, and consultants use SMS for scheduling, document chase, and client check-ins. The tone is different from retail. SMS in professional services has to feel personal, not promotional. Two-way conversations matter more than mass sends.
B2B sales teams use SMS as a follow-up channel after meetings, demos, and proposals. The numbers are consistent: response rates run several times higher than email for the same prospect at the same stage. The trick is using SMS sparingly and tying it directly to where the deal sits in the pipeline. Native CRM integration is non-negotiable.
A few mistakes show up over and over:
The best text messaging service for business is the one that does what your team needs without making you work around its limits. For most businesses with real volume, real integrations, and real two-way conversations, that's Sakari.
Start a free 14-day Sakari trial and see how it fits your stack before you spend anything.
Sakari is the strongest all-around choice for businesses that need two-way conversations, automation, CRM integration, and multi-channel campaigns. E-commerce brands deeply committed to Shopify and email marketing may prefer Emotive or Klaviyo. Small businesses with simple, low-volume needs often start with EZ Texting or TextMagic.
Entry-level plans start around $20 to $30 per month, but real costs depend on message volume, number type, MMS usage, and integrations. Most businesses spend between $50 and $500 per month, with high-volume senders paying more. Sakari starts at $25 per month with no long-term commitment.
Yes. Any US business sending application-to-person SMS through standard 10-digit numbers needs to register with The Campaign Registry. Carriers throttle or block unregistered traffic, often within days. Choose a provider that helps you complete the registration rather than leaving you to figure it out.
Yes, and often better. Home services, dental practices, property management, and professional services see strong results because SMS fits the appointment-driven, service-based workflow naturally. Confirmations, reminders, and follow-ups are perfect SMS moments and they convert.
SMS marketing usually refers to promotional campaigns to opted-in subscribers. Business text messaging is broader and includes one-to-one conversations, appointment reminders, customer service, and operational alerts. Most modern platforms support both, but the stronger ones handle conversations well, not just blasts.
With Sakari, you can usually send your first test message within minutes of signing up. Full 10DLC brand and campaign approval takes longer, anywhere from a few business days to a few weeks depending on the carrier, but you can begin testing and integrating before approval finishes.
Yes. The best platforms offer native integrations with HubSpot, Salesforce, Pipedrive, ActiveCampaign, and other major CRMs. Native integrations are faster and more reliable than Zapier-style middleware. Confirm what kind of integration you're getting, native or third-party, before you commit.