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Overview

Regulations change significantly depending on where you are sending text messages. For example, depending on where your recipients are located, you may or may not be able to use an alphanumeric SMS sender ID.

The main SMS features in different countries are summarized in this spreadsheet.

There are specific rules to be followed for sending SMS in certain countries. In general, for best global delivery of SMS, follow these best practices:

  • avoid using special symbols like "€" in the text message

  • avoid links, religious, political and adult content

  • keep the message shorter than 153 characters

  • consider that your sender ID could be replaced (e.g. from an alphanumeric sender with your company name, to a numeric one), so identify yourself in the message

  • if you are using an alphanumeric sender ID, use a sender that can be immediately associated to your company/activity (no generic senders like "Special", "Promo", "SMS"...)

Delivery Receipts (DLRs) are widely supported: however, there are a few exceptions where those are not provided by some local networks in Egypt, Mexico, Brazil, US, Canada.

On this page
Toc

Notes about delivering SMS in certain countries

Albania

Albanian Mobile Communications (AMC Mobil) (27601) filters for alphanumeric sender ID's. We recommend using a numeric sender ID that does not start with a 0 to bypass the filter.

Canada

Canada and the USA both have very specific messaging restrictions and a direct connection is necessary in order to ensure message delivery to the numerous networks.

Person-to-Person traffic may be sent to Canada, using a long virtual number. An SMS may originate from a mobile phone, a computer application or an internet-based service, but the message must have been initiated due to human interaction. Marketing campaigns and mobile content delivery, such as bulk notifications, cannot be sent to Canada via long code. MMA best practices can be found here.

The numerous feature restrictions for our long-virtual-number route are as follows:

  • Limited numeric sender only --> In the “from” field you need to specify your pre-approved Canadian (or US) virtual number in international format e.g. 18479121345. Otherwise your message will get rejected with reject code 15 Illegal Sender Address - rejected.
  • Carriers do not send handset delivery receipts (LVN route only - default). Intermediate DLR (accepted status) will be provided as soon as the message reaches the operator's platform.
  • Binary, VCard, unicode and long SMS are not supported by Canadian carriers.
  • Euro symbol (€) and some accented characters are not supported by Canadian Carriers.
  • You may send a maximum of 1 SMS per second and per virtual number in Canada due to local carriers regulations. If you send messages more quickly, the message(s) will be rejected. If you require higher throughput, you can purchase more numbers and spread your traffic across your numbers. E.g. 10 numbers = 10 SMS per second.
  • Maximum of 500 messages per day and per long virtual number. If this is exceeded your number will be blocked and will no longer work.

China

In general the following restrictions apply for all Chinese carriers:

 1. Sender ID could be replaced by numeric local (or Hong Kong) service code.

 2. Message content length:

  • up to 65chars UCS2 or 130chars ASCII for each non-concatenated SMS; 
  • up to 62chars UCS2 for each SMS if concatenated (not support ASCII).

3. Adult and especially political messages are very likely to be blocked. Known filtered keywords: Falung Gong, Tiananmen Square.

4. URL links are not allowed in messages. Any messages with a URL will be blocked.

5. Arabic characters cannot be supported into any Chinese networks.

France

Since Orange France does not allow numeric senders, it is recommended to only send messages with alphanumeric sender.

India

Messages sent to numbers registered in the NDNC (National Do Not Call) list will be blocked. 

  • You can check the destination number on the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India registry using the following search tool: http://www.nccptrai.gov.in/nccpregistry/search.misc (omit India International prefix 91)
  • If you have transactional messages which are either user-generated or expected, you can ask our service desk to bypass this filter, it requires a 6 - Alphanumeric sender ID and SMS template for registration (minimum 20k SMS per month). This senderID will be used as often as possible but a small % of traffic will still be overwritten to ensure delivery. This is due to our Adaptive Routing technology which uses the optimum route for all of our traffic, updated on a dynamic basis.

Unregistered sender ID is fixed to a local shortcode as required by regulation.

We can only guarantee message delivery between 9am to 9pm. Messages submitted after 9pm we will attempt to send, but due to local regulations, these messages may be blocked or queued.

Number of messages to the same number limitations:

  • More than 6 messages with the same sender or text to the same number within an hour may be blocked
  • Users may not be able to receive more than a total of 200 SMS per day across all incoming streams.

Messages towards Jammu and Kashmir networks (example, 405/55 - Airtel J&K) will be blocked by the government due to political sensitivity.

Indonesia

There are a number of senderID changes which may take place to ensure your messages are delivered successfully:

  • Telkomsel (51010) does not support dynamic senderID, all senderIDs will be overwritten by an alphanumeric string.
  • 3 (51089) as dynamic senderID
  • Indosat (51001), AXIS (51008), Smartfren (51009) and XL (51011) the sender may be modified to a numeric sender.

Iran

We recommend using International numeric sender ID to bypass network filters. Handset delivery receipts are not reliable for any of the networks.

  • All alpha senders to Iran Telecom (43211) and MTN Irancell (43235) have to be whitelisted or will be overwritten by a numeric senderID. 
  • All alpha senders to Iran Rightel (43220) will be overwritten with a long number to ensure delivery. 
  • No religious, political or adult content is allowed. 

Italy

New regulations

The AGCOM (Italian Communications Authority) Resolution No. 42/13/CIR NRA, has now come into force. The Resolution deals with the registration of bulk SMS Outbound (MT) message originators, i.e. the alphanumeric characters used in the Sender ID to personalise Application-to-Person (A2P) SMS messages. 

Until now, any business globally was allowed to terminate an SMS MT message to an Italian subscriber with a Sender ID comprised of any alpha, numeric or alphanumeric originators; and there was no process to help ensure that names used as Sender IDs were sent by the owners or licensees of the applicable brands, trademarks or trade names. For example, anyone globally could send a message to an Italian subscriber with the word ‘Apple Inc.’ in the Sender ID, with no process established to enable a subscriber to know whether Apple Inc. sent that message or not. Similarly, there was no easy way for the subscriber or AGCOM to contact the sender of the message; this potentially exposed subscribers to fraudulent messages and services.

Violators of these new regulations are subject to substantial monetary penalties.

What does this mean for me?

All providers who operate A2P services in Italy must register their Sender IDs (and those of their customers) in a database maintained by AGCOM

This means one of the following will apply to you as our customer. 

  • If you have already registered one or more Sender IDs, it is your responsibility to provide us with the information required by AGCOM in relation to you, your customers and the relevant Sender IDs. 
  • If you have not already registered a Sender ID, you must register a new one, using the form available in the admin console

What will happen to unregistered SenderIDs? 

In order to comply with the Resolution we may (at our discretion) replace the unregistered Sender ID with a numeric Sender ID (a +39 number issued by the operators in Italy) or block the message. 

What do I need to do and by when? 

It is mandatory for all customers sending traffic towards Italy to complete the form available in your admin console (menu Settings > Account settings > Admin contacts).

Which SenderIDs are allowed?

The Sender ID must be directly related to the sending company. Any generic or not easily identifiable SenderID will not be accepted, causing the message to be sent with a numeric sender or blocked.

Malysia

"RMB 0.00" (with a space after the last 0) may be added to message bodies. This is so the end users know that they will not be charged for replying to Opt Out.  If you have not put this in your message the operator will automatically add it and may compromise the maximum length of your sms (153 characters).

Saudi Arabia

Transactional messages (not email marketing, but ex. Government, bank, temporary passwords ...) you need to contact the support team in order to be registered to the whitelist providing this data:

  • Full Company Name
  • All Sender IDs Associated with Enterprise traffic
  • Message Description: this is a description of the messages content associated with each originator.
  • End User Consent Evidence of how (location, media, source, etc.) and when (date & time) consent was given by an end user for the receipt of specific messages for every enterprise MSISDN Which is receiving specific enterprise message

Singapore

Customers must not to send promotional or marketing messages to mobile numbers registered in the new "National Do Not Call Registry" (DNC), unless the recipient has expressed in a clear and unambiguous consent. The DNC registry is an integral part of the Personal Data Protection Act 2012 (PDPA) and will take effect from 2 July 2014. To do this you need to register and maintain a register http://www.dnc.gov.sg/ CONTROL every 30 days. The Penalties can be up to a 1 million SGD (Singapore Dollar, which is about half a million euro).

United Arab Emirates

Messages are categorized into two ways:

  • marketing / promotion: to be approved you must submit a formal request, on letter that contains the details of the campaign (sender, content type, type of recipient) to support MailUp, who will transmit it to operators.
  • transactional: a prior approval is not required, however, the sender will be overwritten with a shortcode (ex. 5070).

USA

The rules

verview

Regulations change significantly depending on where you are sending text messages. For example, depending on where your recipients are located, you may or may not be able to use an alphanumeric SMS sender ID.

The main SMS features in different countries are summarized in this spreadsheet.

There are specific rules to be followed for sending SMS in certain countries. In general, for best global delivery of SMS, follow these best practices:

  • avoid using special symbols like "€" in the text message

  • avoid links, religious, political and adult content

  • keep the message shorter than 153 characters

  • consider that your sender ID could be replaced (e.g. from an alphanumeric sender with your company name, to a numeric one), so identify yourself in the message

  • if you are using an alphanumeric sender ID, use a sender that can be immediately associated to your company/activity (no generic senders like "Special", "Promo", "SMS"...)

Delivery Receipts (DLRs) are widely supported: however, there are a few exceptions where those are not provided by some local networks in Egypt, Mexico, Brazil, US, Canada.

On this page
Toc

Notes about delivering SMS in certain countries

Albania

Albanian Mobile Communications (AMC Mobil) (27601) filters for alphanumeric sender ID's. We recommend using a numeric sender ID that does not start with a 0 to bypass the filter.

Canada

Canada and the USA both have very specific messaging restrictions and a direct connection is necessary in order to ensure message delivery to the numerous networks.

Person-to-Person traffic may be sent to Canada, using a long virtual number. An SMS may originate from a mobile phone, a computer application or an internet-based service, but the message must have been initiated due to human interaction. Marketing campaigns and mobile content delivery, such as bulk notifications, cannot be sent to Canada via long code. MMA best practices can be found here.

The numerous feature restrictions for our long-virtual-number route are as follows:

  • Limited numeric sender only --> In the “from” field you need to specify your pre-approved Canadian (or US) virtual number in international format e.g. 18479121345. Otherwise your message will get rejected with reject code 15 Illegal Sender Address - rejected.
  • Carriers do not send handset delivery receipts (LVN route only - default). Intermediate DLR (accepted status) will be provided as soon as the message reaches the operator's platform.
  • Binary, VCard, unicode and long SMS are not supported by Canadian carriers.
  • Euro symbol (€) and some accented characters are not supported by Canadian Carriers.
  • You may send a maximum of 1 SMS per second and per virtual number in Canada due to local carriers regulations. If you send messages more quickly, the message(s) will be rejected. If you require higher throughput, you can purchase more numbers and spread your traffic across your numbers. E.g. 10 numbers = 10 SMS per second.
  • Maximum of 500 messages per day and per long virtual number. If this is exceeded your number will be blocked and will no longer work.

China

In general the following restrictions apply for all Chinese carriers:

 1. Sender ID could be replaced by numeric local (or Hong Kong) service code.

 2. Message content length:

  • up to 65chars UCS2 or 130chars ASCII for each non-concatenated SMS; 
  • up to 62chars UCS2 for each SMS if concatenated (not support ASCII).

3. Adult and especially political messages are very likely to be blocked. Known filtered keywords: Falung Gong, Tiananmen Square.

4. URL links are not allowed in messages. Any messages with a URL will be blocked.

5. Arabic characters cannot be supported into any Chinese networks.

France

Since Orange France does not allow numeric senders, it is recommended to only send messages with alphanumeric sender.

India

Messages sent to numbers registered in the NDNC (National Do Not Call) list will be blocked. 

  • You can check the destination number on the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India registry using the following search tool: http://www.nccptrai.gov.in/nccpregistry/search.misc (omit India International prefix 91)
  • If you have transactional messages which are either user-generated or expected, you can ask our service desk to bypass this filter, it requires a 6 - Alphanumeric sender ID and SMS template for registration (minimum 20k SMS per month). This senderID will be used as often as possible but a small % of traffic will still be overwritten to ensure delivery. This is due to our Adaptive Routing technology which uses the optimum route for all of our traffic, updated on a dynamic basis.

Unregistered sender ID is fixed to a local shortcode as required by regulation.

We can only guarantee message delivery between 9am to 9pm. Messages submitted after 9pm we will attempt to send, but due to local regulations, these messages may be blocked or queued.

Number of messages to the same number limitations:

  • More than 6 messages with the same sender or text to the same number within an hour may be blocked
  • Users may not be able to receive more than a total of 200 SMS per day across all incoming streams.

Messages towards Jammu and Kashmir networks (example, 405/55 - Airtel J&K) will be blocked by the government due to political sensitivity.

Indonesia

There are a number of senderID changes which may take place to ensure your messages are delivered successfully:

  • Telkomsel (51010) does not support dynamic senderID, all senderIDs will be overwritten by an alphanumeric string.
  • 3 (51089) as dynamic senderID
  • Indosat (51001), AXIS (51008), Smartfren (51009) and XL (51011) the sender may be modified to a numeric sender.

Iran

We recommend using International numeric sender ID to bypass network filters. Handset delivery receipts are not reliable for any of the networks.

  • All alpha senders to Iran Telecom (43211) and MTN Irancell (43235) have to be whitelisted or will be overwritten by a numeric senderID. 
  • All alpha senders to Iran Rightel (43220) will be overwritten with a long number to ensure delivery. 
  • No religious, political or adult content is allowed. 

Italy

New regulations

The AGCOM (Italian Communications Authority) Resolution No. 42/13/CIR NRA, has now come into force. The Resolution deals with the registration of bulk SMS Outbound (MT) message originators, i.e. the alphanumeric characters used in the Sender ID to personalise Application-to-Person (A2P) SMS messages. 

Until now, any business globally was allowed to terminate an SMS MT message to an Italian subscriber with a Sender ID comprised of any alpha, numeric or alphanumeric originators; and there was no process to help ensure that names used as Sender IDs were sent by the owners or licensees of the applicable brands, trademarks or trade names. For example, anyone globally could send a message to an Italian subscriber with the word ‘Apple Inc.’ in the Sender ID, with no process established to enable a subscriber to know whether Apple Inc. sent that message or not. Similarly, there was no easy way for the subscriber or AGCOM to contact the sender of the message; this potentially exposed subscribers to fraudulent messages and services.

Violators of these new regulations are subject to substantial monetary penalties.

What does this mean for me?

All providers who operate A2P services in Italy must register their Sender IDs (and those of their customers) in a database maintained by AGCOM

This means one of the following will apply to you as our customer. 

  • If you have already registered one or more Sender IDs, it is your responsibility to provide us with the information required by AGCOM in relation to you, your customers and the relevant Sender IDs. 
  • If you have not already registered a Sender ID, you must register a new one, using the form available in the admin console

What will happen to unregistered SenderIDs? 

In order to comply with the Resolution we may (at our discretion) replace the unregistered Sender ID with a numeric Sender ID (a +39 number issued by the operators in Italy) or block the message. 

What do I need to do and by when? 

It is mandatory for all customers sending traffic towards Italy to complete the form available in your admin console (menu Settings > Account settings > Admin contacts).

Which SenderIDs are allowed?

The Sender ID must be directly related to the sending company. Any generic or not easily identifiable SenderID will not be accepted, causing the message to be sent with a numeric sender or blocked.

Kuwait

Both numeric and alphanumeric senders are allowed.

Senders must be pre-registred with the Operator, with no additional cost.

Malysia

"RMB 0.00" (with a space after the last 0) may be added to message bodies. This is so the end users know that they will not be charged for replying to Opt Out.  If you have not put this in your message the operator will automatically add it and may compromise the maximum length of your sms (153 characters).

Saudi Arabia

Transactional messages (not email marketing, but ex. Government, bank, temporary passwords ...) you need to contact the support team in order to be registered to the whitelist providing this data:

  • Full Company Name
  • All Sender IDs Associated with Enterprise traffic
  • Message Description: this is a description of the messages content associated with each originator.
  • End User Consent Evidence of how (location, media, source, etc.) and when (date & time) consent was given by an end user for the receipt of specific messages for every enterprise MSISDN Which is receiving specific enterprise message

* The sender must be alphanumeric (numbers are not allowed) , and the aliases must be pre - registered with the Mobile Operator, with no additional cost.

 

Singapore

Customers must not to send promotional or marketing messages to mobile numbers registered in the new "National Do Not Call Registry" (DNC), unless the recipient has expressed in a clear and unambiguous consent. The DNC registry is an integral part of the Personal Data Protection Act 2012 (PDPA) and will take effect from 2 July 2014. To do this you need to register and maintain a register http://www.dnc.gov.sg/ CONTROL every 30 days. The Penalties can be up to a 1 million SGD (Singapore Dollar, which is about half a million euro).

 

South Korea

Only numerical senders are allowed. Alphanumeric and/or special characters are not allowed.

In addition:

1) alpha senders will be converted to a number

2) long sms are not supported

3) there is no distinction between transactional and promotional messages

 

United Arab Emirates

Messages are categorized into two ways:

  • marketing / promotion: to be approved you must submit a formal request, on letter that contains the details of the campaign (sender, content type, type of recipient) to support MailUp, who will transmit it to operators.

transactional: a prior approval is not required, however, the sender will be overwritten with a shortcode (ex. 5070).

*Both numeric and alphanumeric senders are allowed. Senders must be pre- registred with the Mobile Operator at the cost for the set up of each alias and a monthly fee for each alias. It is not necessary (as for China) a local dedicated agency. The pre - registration requires from 3 to 6 weeks to be activated. An authorization letter needs to be filled, stamped and signed up.

 

USA

The rules are different depending on whether you are sending:

  • transactional SMS messages: you will use a "long number"
  • promotional SMS messages: you will use a keyword and a shortcode

There are very strict regulations in place with regard to what can and cannot be done when sending promotional SMS messages.

For details, see: /wiki/spaces/MUG/pages/36864453

 

Overview

Regulations change significantly depending on where you are sending text messages. For example, depending on where your recipients are located, you may or may not be able to use an alphanumeric SMS sender ID.

The main SMS features in different countries are summarized in this spreadsheet.

There are specific rules to be followed for sending SMS in certain countries. In general, for best global delivery of SMS, follow these best practices:

  • avoid using special symbols like "€" in the text message

  • avoid links, religious, political and adult content

  • keep the message shorter than 153 characters

  • consider that your sender ID could be replaced (e.g. from an alphanumeric sender with your company name, to a numeric one), so identify yourself in the message

  • if you are using an alphanumeric sender ID, use a sender that can be immediately associated to your company/activity (no generic senders like "Special", "Promo", "SMS"...)

Delivery Receipts (DLRs) are widely supported: however, there are a few exceptions where those are not provided by some local networks in Egypt, Mexico, Brazil, US, Canada.

On this page
Toc

Notes about delivering SMS in certain countries

Albania

Albanian Mobile Communications (AMC Mobil) (27601) filters for alphanumeric sender ID's. We recommend using a numeric sender ID that does not start with a 0 to bypass the filter.

Canada

Canada and the USA both have very specific messaging restrictions and a direct connection is necessary in order to ensure message delivery to the numerous networks.

Person-to-Person traffic may be sent to Canada, using a long virtual number. An SMS may originate from a mobile phone, a computer application or an internet-based service, but the message must have been initiated due to human interaction. Marketing campaigns and mobile content delivery, such as bulk notifications, cannot be sent to Canada via long code. MMA best practices can be found here.

The numerous feature restrictions for our long-virtual-number route are as follows:

  • Limited numeric sender only --> In the “from” field you need to specify your pre-approved Canadian (or US) virtual number in international format e.g. 18479121345. Otherwise your message will get rejected with reject code 15 Illegal Sender Address - rejected.
  • Carriers do not send handset delivery receipts (LVN route only - default). Intermediate DLR (accepted status) will be provided as soon as the message reaches the operator's platform.
  • Binary, VCard, unicode and long SMS are not supported by Canadian carriers.
  • Euro symbol (€) and some accented characters are not supported by Canadian Carriers.
  • You may send a maximum of 1 SMS per second and per virtual number in Canada due to local carriers regulations. If you send messages more quickly, the message(s) will be rejected. If you require higher throughput, you can purchase more numbers and spread your traffic across your numbers. E.g. 10 numbers = 10 SMS per second.
  • Maximum of 500 messages per day and per long virtual number. If this is exceeded your number will be blocked and will no longer work.

China

In general the following restrictions apply for all Chinese carriers:

 1. Sender ID could be replaced by numeric local (or Hong Kong) service code.

 2. Message content length:

  • up to 65chars UCS2 or 130chars ASCII for each non-concatenated SMS; 
  • up to 62chars UCS2 for each SMS if concatenated (not support ASCII).

3. Adult and especially political messages are very likely to be blocked. Known filtered keywords: Falung Gong, Tiananmen Square.

4. URL links are not allowed in messages. Any messages with a URL will be blocked.

5. Arabic characters cannot be supported into any Chinese networks.

France

Since Orange France does not allow numeric senders, it is recommended to only send messages with alphanumeric sender.

India

Messages sent to numbers registered in the NDNC (National Do Not Call) list will be blocked. 

  • You can check the destination number on the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India registry using the following search tool: http://www.nccptrai.gov.in/nccpregistry/search.misc (omit India International prefix 91)
  • If you have transactional messages which are either user-generated or expected, you can ask our service desk to bypass this filter, it requires a 6 - Alphanumeric sender ID and SMS template for registration (minimum 20k SMS per month). This senderID will be used as often as possible but a small % of traffic will still be overwritten to ensure delivery. This is due to our Adaptive Routing technology which uses the optimum route for all of our traffic, updated on a dynamic basis.

Unregistered sender ID is fixed to a local shortcode as required by regulation.

We can only guarantee message delivery between 9am to 9pm. Messages submitted after 9pm we will attempt to send, but due to local regulations, these messages may be blocked or queued.

Number of messages to the same number limitations:

  • More than 6 messages with the same sender or text to the same number within an hour may be blocked
  • Users may not be able to receive more than a total of 200 SMS per day across all incoming streams.

Messages towards Jammu and Kashmir networks (example, 405/55 - Airtel J&K) will be blocked by the government due to political sensitivity.

Indonesia

There are a number of senderID changes which may take place to ensure your messages are delivered successfully:

  • Telkomsel (51010) does not support dynamic senderID, all senderIDs will be overwritten by an alphanumeric string.
  • 3 (51089) as dynamic senderID
  • Indosat (51001), AXIS (51008), Smartfren (51009) and XL (51011) the sender may be modified to a numeric sender.

Iran

We recommend using International numeric sender ID to bypass network filters. Handset delivery receipts are not reliable for any of the networks.

  • All alpha senders to Iran Telecom (43211) and MTN Irancell (43235) have to be whitelisted or will be overwritten by a numeric senderID. 
  • All alpha senders to Iran Rightel (43220) will be overwritten with a long number to ensure delivery. 
  • No religious, political or adult content is allowed. 

Italy

New regulations

The AGCOM (Italian Communications Authority) Resolution No. 42/13/CIR NRA, has now come into force. The Resolution deals with the registration of bulk SMS Outbound (MT) message originators, i.e. the alphanumeric characters used in the Sender ID to personalise Application-to-Person (A2P) SMS messages. 

Until now, any business globally was allowed to terminate an SMS MT message to an Italian subscriber with a Sender ID comprised of any alpha, numeric or alphanumeric originators; and there was no process to help ensure that names used as Sender IDs were sent by the owners or licensees of the applicable brands, trademarks or trade names. For example, anyone globally could send a message to an Italian subscriber with the word ‘Apple Inc.’ in the Sender ID, with no process established to enable a subscriber to know whether Apple Inc. sent that message or not. Similarly, there was no easy way for the subscriber or AGCOM to contact the sender of the message; this potentially exposed subscribers to fraudulent messages and services.

Violators of these new regulations are subject to substantial monetary penalties.

What does this mean for me?

All providers who operate A2P services in Italy must register their Sender IDs (and those of their customers) in a database maintained by AGCOM

This means one of the following will apply to you as our customer. 

  • If you have already registered one or more Sender IDs, it is your responsibility to provide us with the information required by AGCOM in relation to you, your customers and the relevant Sender IDs. 
  • If you have not already registered a Sender ID, you must register a new one, using the form available in the admin console

What will happen to unregistered SenderIDs? 

In order to comply with the Resolution we may (at our discretion) replace the unregistered Sender ID with a numeric Sender ID (a +39 number issued by the operators in Italy) or block the message. 

What do I need to do and by when? 

It is mandatory for all customers sending traffic towards Italy to complete the form available in your admin console (menu Settings > Account settings > Admin contacts).

Which SenderIDs are allowed?

The Sender ID must be directly related to the sending company. Any generic or not easily identifiable SenderID will not be accepted, causing the message to be sent with a numeric sender or blocked.

Malysia

"RMB 0.00" (with a space after the last 0) may be added to message bodies. This is so the end users know that they will not be charged for replying to Opt Out.  If you have not put this in your message the operator will automatically add it and may compromise the maximum length of your sms (153 characters).

Saudi Arabia

Transactional messages (not email marketing, but ex. Government, bank, temporary passwords ...) you need to contact the support team in order to be registered to the whitelist providing this data:

  • Full Company Name
  • All Sender IDs Associated with Enterprise traffic
  • Message Description: this is a description of the messages content associated with each originator.
  • End User Consent Evidence of how (location, media, source, etc.) and when (date & time) consent was given by an end user for the receipt of specific messages for every enterprise MSISDN Which is receiving specific enterprise message

The sender must be alphanumeric (numbers are not allowed) , and the aliases must be pre - registered with the Mobile Operator, with no additional cost (Sap).

 

 

Singapore

Customers must not to send promotional or marketing messages to mobile numbers registered in the new "National Do Not Call Registry" (DNC), unless the recipient has expressed in a clear and unambiguous consent. The DNC registry is an integral part of the Personal Data Protection Act 2012 (PDPA) and will take effect from 2 July 2014. To do this you need to register and maintain a register http://www.dnc.gov.sg/ CONTROL every 30 days. The Penalties can be up to a 1 million SGD (Singapore Dollar, which is about half a million euro).

United Arab Emirates

Messages are categorized into two ways:

  • marketing / promotion: to be approved you must submit a formal request, on letter that contains the details of the campaign (sender, content type, type of recipient) to support MailUp, who will transmit it to operators.
  • transactional: a prior approval is not required, however, the sender will be overwritten with a shortcode (ex. 5070).

USA

The rules are different depending on whether you are sending:

  • transactional SMS messages: you will use a "long number"
  • promotional SMS messages: you will use a keyword and a shortcode

There are very strict regulations in place with regard to what can and cannot be done when sending promotional SMS messages.

For details, see: /wiki/spaces/MUG/pages/36864453

Kuwait

ules 

 

are different depending on whether you are sending: 

both numeric and alphanumeric senders are allowed.
Senders must be pre - registered with the Operator, with no additional cost
  • transactional SMS messages: you will use a "long number"
  • promotional S

Overview

Regulations change significantly depending on where you are sending text messages. For example, depending on where your recipients are located, you may or may not be able to use an alphanumeric SMS sender ID.

The main SMS features in different countries are summarized in this spreadsheet.

There are specific rules to be followed for sending SMS in certain countries. In general, for best global delivery of SMS, follow these best practices:

  • avoid using special symbols like "€" in the text message

  • avoid links, religious, political and adult content

  • keep the message shorter than 153 characters

  • consider that your sender ID could be replaced (e.g. from an alphanumeric sender with your company name, to a numeric one), so identify yourself in the message

  • if you are using an alphanumeric sender ID, use a sender that can be immediately associated to your company/activity (no generic senders like "Special", "Promo", "SMS"...)

Delivery Receipts (DLRs) are widely supported: however, there are a few exceptions where those are not provided by some local networks in Egypt, Mexico, Brazil, US, Canada.

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Notes about delivering SMS in certain countries

Albania

Albanian Mobile Communications (AMC Mobil) (27601) filters for alphanumeric sender ID's. We recommend using a numeric sender ID that does not start with a 0 to bypass the filter.

Canada

Canada and the USA both have very specific messaging restrictions and a direct connection is necessary in order to ensure message delivery to the numerous networks.

Person-to-Person traffic may be sent to Canada, using a long virtual number. An SMS may originate from a mobile phone, a computer application or an internet-based service, but the message must have been initiated due to human interaction. Marketing campaigns and mobile content delivery, such as bulk notifications, cannot be sent to Canada via long code. MMA best practices can be found here.

The numerous feature restrictions for our long-virtual-number route are as follows:

  • Limited numeric sender only --> In the “from” field you need to specify your pre-approved Canadian (or US) virtual number in international format e.g. 18479121345. Otherwise your message will get rejected with reject code 15 Illegal Sender Address - rejected.
  • Carriers do not send handset delivery receipts (LVN route only - default). Intermediate DLR (accepted status) will be provided as soon as the message reaches the operator's platform.
  • Binary, VCard, unicode and long SMS are not supported by Canadian carriers.
  • Euro symbol (€) and some accented characters are not supported by Canadian Carriers.
  • You may send a maximum of 1 SMS per second and per virtual number in Canada due to local carriers regulations. If you send messages more quickly, the message(s) will be rejected. If you require higher throughput, you can purchase more numbers and spread your traffic across your numbers. E.g. 10 numbers = 10 SMS per second.
  • Maximum of 500 messages per day and per long virtual number. If this is exceeded your number will be blocked and will no longer work.

China

In general the following restrictions apply for all Chinese carriers:

 1. Sender ID could be replaced by numeric local (or Hong Kong) service code.

 2. Message content length:

  • up to 65chars UCS2 or 130chars ASCII for each non-concatenated SMS; 
  • up to 62chars UCS2 for each SMS if concatenated (not support ASCII).

3. Adult and especially political messages are very likely to be blocked. Known filtered keywords: Falung Gong, Tiananmen Square.

4. URL links are not allowed in messages. Any messages with a URL will be blocked.

5. Arabic characters cannot be supported into any Chinese networks.

France

Since Orange France does not allow numeric senders, it is recommended to only send messages with alphanumeric sender.

India

Messages sent to numbers registered in the NDNC (National Do Not Call) list will be blocked. 

  • You can check the destination number on the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India registry using the following search tool: http://www.nccptrai.gov.in/nccpregistry/search.misc (omit India International prefix 91)
  • If you have transactional messages which are either user-generated or expected, you can ask our service desk to bypass this filter, it requires a 6 - Alphanumeric sender ID and SMS template for registration (minimum 20k SMS per month). This senderID will be used as often as possible but a small % of traffic will still be overwritten to ensure delivery. This is due to our Adaptive Routing technology which uses the optimum route for all of our traffic, updated on a dynamic basis.

Unregistered sender ID is fixed to a local shortcode as required by regulation.

We can only guarantee message delivery between 9am to 9pm. Messages submitted after 9pm we will attempt to send, but due to local regulations, these messages may be blocked or queued.

Number of messages to the same number limitations:

  • More than 6 messages with the same sender or text to the same number within an hour may be blocked
  • Users may not be able to receive more than a total of 200 SMS per day across all incoming streams.

Messages towards Jammu and Kashmir networks (example, 405/55 - Airtel J&K) will be blocked by the government due to political sensitivity.

Indonesia

There are a number of senderID changes which may take place to ensure your messages are delivered successfully:

  • Telkomsel (51010) does not support dynamic senderID, all senderIDs will be overwritten by an alphanumeric string.
  • 3 (51089) as dynamic senderID
  • Indosat (51001), AXIS (51008), Smartfren (51009) and XL (51011) the sender may be modified to a numeric sender.

Iran

We recommend using International numeric sender ID to bypass network filters. Handset delivery receipts are not reliable for any of the networks.

  • All alpha senders to Iran Telecom (43211) and MTN Irancell (43235) have to be whitelisted or will be overwritten by a numeric senderID. 
  • All alpha senders to Iran Rightel (43220) will be overwritten with a long number to ensure delivery. 
  • No religious, political or adult content is allowed. 

Italy

New regulations

The AGCOM (Italian Communications Authority) Resolution No. 42/13/CIR NRA, has now come into force. The Resolution deals with the registration of bulk SMS Outbound (MT) message originators, i.e. the alphanumeric characters used in the Sender ID to personalise Application-to-Person (A2P) SMS messages. 

Until now, any business globally was allowed to terminate an SMS MT message to an Italian subscriber with a Sender ID comprised of any alpha, numeric or alphanumeric originators; and there was no process to help ensure that names used as Sender IDs were sent by the owners or licensees of the applicable brands, trademarks or trade names. For example, anyone globally could send a message to an Italian subscriber with the word ‘Apple Inc.’ in the Sender ID, with no process established to enable a subscriber to know whether Apple Inc. sent that message or not. Similarly, there was no easy way for the subscriber or AGCOM to contact the sender of the message; this potentially exposed subscribers to fraudulent messages and services.

Violators of these new regulations are subject to substantial monetary penalties.

What does this mean for me?

All providers who operate A2P services in Italy must register their Sender IDs (and those of their customers) in a database maintained by AGCOM

This means one of the following will apply to you as our customer. 

  • If you have already registered one or more Sender IDs, it is your responsibility to provide us with the information required by AGCOM in relation to you, your customers and the relevant Sender IDs. 
  • If you have not already registered a Sender ID, you must register a new one, using the form available in the admin console

What will happen to unregistered SenderIDs? 

In order to comply with the Resolution we may (at our discretion) replace the unregistered Sender ID with a numeric Sender ID (a +39 number issued by the operators in Italy) or block the message. 

What do I need to do and by when? 

It is mandatory for all customers sending traffic towards Italy to complete the form available in your admin console (menu Settings > Account settings > Admin contacts).

Which SenderIDs are allowed?

The Sender ID must be directly related to the sending company. Any generic or not easily identifiable SenderID will not be accepted, causing the message to be sent with a numeric sender or blocked.

Malysia

"RMB 0.00" (with a space after the last 0) may be added to message bodies. This is so the end users know that they will not be charged for replying to Opt Out.  If you have not put this in your message the operator will automatically add it and may compromise the maximum length of your sms (153 characters).

Saudi Arabia

Transactional messages (not email marketing, but ex. Government, bank, temporary passwords ...) you need to contact the support team in order to be registered to the whitelist providing this data:

  • Full Company Name
  • All Sender IDs Associated with Enterprise traffic
  • Message Description: this is a description of the messages content associated with each originator.
  • End User Consent Evidence of how (location, media, source, etc.) and when (date & time) consent was given by an end user for the receipt of specific messages for every enterprise MSISDN Which is receiving specific enterprise message

The sender must be alphanumeric (numbers are not allowed) , and the aliases must be pre - registered with the Mobile Operator, with no additional cost (Sap).

 

 

Singapore

Customers must not to send promotional or marketing messages to mobile numbers registered in the new "National Do Not Call Registry" (DNC), unless the recipient has expressed in a clear and unambiguous consent. The DNC registry is an integral part of the Personal Data Protection Act 2012 (PDPA) and will take effect from 2 July 2014. To do this you need to register and maintain a register http://www.dnc.gov.sg/ CONTROL every 30 days. The Penalties can be up to a 1 million SGD (Singapore Dollar, which is about half a million euro).

United Arab Emirates

Messages are categorized into two ways:

  • marketing / promotion: to be approved you must submit a formal request, on letter that contains the details of the campaign (sender, content type, type of recipient) to support MailUp, who will transmit it to operators.
  • transactional: a prior approval is not required, however, the sender will be overwritten with a shortcode (ex. 5070).

USA

The rules are different depending on whether you are sending:

  • transactional SMS messages: you will use a "long number"
  • promotional SMS messages: you will use a keyword and a shortcode

There are very strict regulations in place with regard to what can and cannot be done when sending promotional SMS messages.

For details, see: /wiki/spaces/MUG/pages/36864453

Kuwait

ules 

both numeric and alphanumeric senders are allowed.
Senders must be pre - registered with the Operator, with no additional cost

are different depending on whether you are sending:

  • transactional SMS messages: you will use a "long number"
  • promotional SMS messages: you will use a keyword and a shortcode

There are very strict regulations in place with regard to what can and cannot be done when sending promotional SMS messages.

For details, see: /wiki/spaces/MUG/pages/36864453

 

 
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