Available now · open source

Self-host Ringee for full control

Ringee is open source, so self-hosting is available today. Run it on your own infrastructure to own your data and deployment end to end. It’s best suited to teams comfortable operating their own stack — everyone else can use the hosted cloud.

Why self-host

  • Keep all data on infrastructure you control
  • Choose where recordings and contacts are stored
  • Run the same open codebase as the hosted version
  • Connect your own Telnyx, CRM, and storage accounts

What you’ll need

  • A server or cloud environment to run the apps
  • PostgreSQL and Redis
  • A Telnyx account for telephony and numbers
  • Clerk for authentication and Stripe for billing
  • Object storage (S3-compatible) for recordings
  • Comfort operating and updating your own deployment

Prefer the easy path?

The hosted cloud runs the same Ringee with none of the operations work. Start free as a freelancer or run your team for a flat $20/month.

  • No infrastructure to run or update
  • Unlimited users on the Organization plan
  • Pay only for calling credits

Frequently asked questions

Is self-hosting available now?

Yes. Because Ringee is open source, you can self-host it today on your own infrastructure. It is best suited to teams comfortable running and maintaining their own deployment.

What do I need to bring?

A place to run the apps plus PostgreSQL and Redis, and accounts for the services Ringee relies on — Telnyx for telephony, Clerk for auth, Stripe for billing, and S3-compatible storage for recordings.

Is self-hosting cheaper than the cloud?

Self-hosting removes the subscription but adds the work of running infrastructure and the cost of the underlying services. The hosted plans are the simplest path for most teams.

Can I move from cloud to self-hosted later?

Self-hosting runs the same open codebase as the hosted version, so you can choose the model that fits your team as your needs change.

Start with the cloud, switch to self-hosted anytime

Create a free account to try Ringee, or grab the code and run it yourself.