Verizon Business Global Enterprise: Multinational Connectivity Across 200+ Countries
Verizon Business Global Enterprise serves multinational corporations that need one contract, one account team and one portal for connectivity across continents. The offering combines Verizon's Tier-1 internet backbone, the MPLS Private IP network and a network of local carrier partnerships that cover more than 200 countries.
Global Footprint Facts
- Country reach — services in 200+ countries through owned network and partner carriers.
- MPLS — Private IP with six classes of service, any-to-any mesh, global route diversity.
- Voice — international SIP trunking in 80+ countries with local numbering plans.
- Mobility — global SIM for enterprise fleets and IoT devices across borders.
- Account — global AM plus regional lead architects across Americas, EMEA, APAC.
MPLS Private IP: The Global Backbone
Global enterprises outgrow point-to-point private lines quickly. MPLS any-to-any topology scales without re-architecting.
Verizon Private IP is the MPLS service that ties sites together across continents. Six classes of service prioritize voice, video, real-time application traffic and best-effort bulk transfer independently. Route diversity options include dual last-mile entrances, diverse POP homing and geographically separate backbone paths between regions. A site in Frankfurt can reach a site in Singapore over a single label-switched path with guaranteed QoS markings preserved end-to-end.
MPLS integrates with managed SD-WAN for hybrid WAN architectures. Customers keep MPLS for mission-critical real-time traffic while layering SD-WAN on broadband or 5G underlays for less sensitive flows. The change control, QoS policies and orchestrator views sit inside My Verizon Business so global NOC teams see both transport layers in one place.
International SIP Trunking
Voice still matters, and global voice is hard. Local numbering plans, regulatory portability rules and emergency services vary per country.
International SIP trunking terminates in 80+ countries with local DIDs, toll-free numbers and E.164 translation. Geo-redundant session border controllers handle failover when a regional POP takes maintenance, so customer-facing phone numbers never go dark. Certification covers Microsoft Teams Phone, Cisco Webex Calling, RingCentral, Zoom Phone and on-premise PBX platforms from Avaya, Cisco and Mitel.
Number portability in countries where Verizon does not operate a local ILEC uses partner carrier relationships. The portal tracks portability requests across regions so telecom managers see status for Paris, Tokyo and Sao Paulo on a single screen. Emergency services routing (E911 in US, 112 in Europe, 119 in parts of Asia) integrates via location registration APIs the SIP fabric triggers when a user joins from a new site.
Global SIM for Mobile Fleets and IoT
Road-warrior executives, field services crews and IoT sensors travel across borders. A single SIM removes per-country procurement from the operations checklist.
Verizon Business Global SIM is a single profile that attaches to partner mobile networks in 200+ countries with centralized billing. Consumption-based and committed-volume plans both exist. IoT deployments benefit most: a logistics company's refrigerated containers crossing North America, Europe and Asia report telemetry on one bill, one portal, one pool of data. Field engineers deploying industrial machinery travel with a global SIM in a laptop or tethered device and work from any market on day one.
Device management for global SIM uses the same device management console as domestic wireless. Administrators push profiles, set roaming caps, enable private APN connections into the enterprise network and generate cost reports per business unit, country or device group. Security policies integrate with the network security catalog for Mobile Device Management on company-issued devices.
Regulatory paperwork — permanent roaming restrictions in Brazil, Turkey, China and a handful of other markets — is handled by the global account team. Customers get a ready-made compliance approach rather than re-discovering the rules every time a new country launches.
Regional Network Presence
Global reach is the headline; regional capability is how projects actually ship.
| Region | Network Presence | Offering |
|---|---|---|
| Americas | Owned fiber US/Canada, partner carriers in LATAM | DIA, MPLS, SIP, mobility, 5G (US) |
| EMEA | Direct POPs London, Frankfurt, Paris, Amsterdam, Madrid, Milan | MPLS, SIP in 30+ EU countries, global SIM |
| APAC | Direct POPs Tokyo, Singapore, Hong Kong, Sydney | MPLS, SIP in 15+ APAC countries, SD-WAN |
| Middle East & Africa | Partner carrier delivery in UAE, Saudi, South Africa, Nigeria | MPLS, SIP in major markets, global SIM |
| Latin America | Partner delivery in Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Chile, Colombia | MPLS, SIP, global SIM (non-permanent roaming) |
People Also Ask
How many countries does Verizon Business reach?
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