Business verification for toll-free registrations
When you submit a toll-free number registration, your business identity is verified using the company identification number (such as an EIN) that you provide. This verification confirms that your business is legitimate and that the company name on your registration matches official records.
Why business verification is required
Business verification is an industry-wide requirement for toll-free messaging. Carriers use your business registration number to confirm your identity against official business registries. This helps prevent fraud, protects legitimate businesses from impersonation, and ensures that toll-free messaging traffic is trusted.
Accepted identification types
The identification type you provide must match the country where your business is registered. The following table lists common identification types by country.
| Country | ID type | Full name | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | EIN | Employer Identification Number | XX-XXXXXXX |
| Canada | CBN | Canada Business Number | XXXXXXXXX (9 digits) |
| United Kingdom | CRN | Company Registration Number | XXXXXXXX (8 chars) |
| Australia | ABN | Australian Business Number | XX XXX XXX XXX (11 digits) |
| EU countries | VAT | VAT Identification Number | Country prefix + digits (varies) |
| New Zealand | NZBN | New Zealand Business Number | XXXXXXXXXXXXX (13 digits) |
| Brazil | CNPJ | Cadastro Nacional da Pessoa Jurídica | XX.XXX.XXX/XXXX-XX |
If your country or identification type is not listed above, choose OTHER and provide your official business registration number in the format issued by your local authority.
How verification works
When you submit your toll-free registration, the following verification steps occur:
Your company identification number is checked against third-party business registries.
The company name on your registration is compared to the name associated with your identification number in official records.
If both match, verification passes automatically and your registration proceeds to content review.
If either check fails, your registration is denied with a business verification failure reason.
Company name requirements
The company name on your registration must exactly match the legal name associated with your business registration number. This is the most common cause of verification failures.
Important
Use your legal entity name (the name on your incorporation documents or IRS records), not your trade name, DBA (doing business as), or brand name.
For example:
Correct: "Acme Holdings LLC" (legal name on EIN records)
Incorrect: "Acme" (trade name) or "Acme Delivery" (DBA)
When verification fails
If automated business verification fails, your registration is denied. You can resolve this by uploading an official business registration document that confirms your identity.
Accepted documents
Upload one of the following documents using the optional business registration document field on the registration form:
IRS CP 575 — EIN Confirmation Letter (issued when EIN was originally assigned)
IRS 147C — EIN Verification Letter (can be requested from the IRS at any time)
State incorporation certificate — Certificate of incorporation or formation from your state
Official business registry extract — For non-US businesses, an official extract from your country's business registry
The document must clearly show both the legal entity name and the registration number that match your form entries.
Common verification failures and solutions
| Failure reason | Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Name mismatch | Company name on form doesn't match the name associated with your BRN in official records | Update the company name to your exact legal entity name as it appears on your incorporation or IRS documents |
| Wrong ID type | Selected identification type doesn't match the number format provided | Verify you selected the correct type (for example, EIN for US, CBN for Canada) and that the number format matches |
| Entity not found | Business not found in third-party verification databases | Upload an official business registration document as proof of identity. This is common for recently formed businesses or entities not in commercial databases. |
| DBA/trade name used | Registration uses a "doing business as" name instead of the legal entity name | Replace with the legal name from your incorporation documents. Your DBA can be used in other fields like brand name. |
| Recently formed business | Business was recently incorporated and hasn't appeared in verification databases yet | Upload your incorporation certificate or IRS CP 575 letter as supporting documentation |