Overview
Use this article to turn off the Session Initiation Protocol Application Layer Gateway (SIP ALG) on your router or firewall. Disabling it helps prevent dropped calls, one-way audio, and failed transfers in ServiceTitan.
Who uses this feature
Administrators
Applies to all business types
Applies to all trades
Things to know
SIP ALG is a network setting on your router or firewall that tries to help VoIP traffic but often breaks modern cloud systems.
Disabling SIP ALG is done outside of ServiceTitan, on your network equipment.
If you are not comfortable changing network settings, contact your IT provider or ISP before making changes.
Key terms for this workflow
Session Initiation Protocol Application Layer Gateway (SIP ALG)
A feature on many routers that watches and edits internet phone (VoIP) traffic to help calls work through the firewall. Modern cloud phone systems like ServiceTitan already handle this themselves, so SIP ALG often breaks calls instead. This causes issues like one-way audio, dropped calls at set time marks, failed transfers, or phones that look registered but don't ring.
Network Address Translation (NAT)
A function on your router that lets many devices in your office (each with its own private IP address) share a single public IP address on the internet. It works like a doorman in an apartment building, keeping track of which device requested what, and normally works well with VoIP until extra features like SIP ALG start changing what's inside the call traffic.
Packets
Small chunks of data that carry information across the internet, each with a payload and a header. Payload contains the content, such as part of a web page or a tiny slice of voice audio and the header shows where it came from and where it's going. Routers usually only read the header to move packets along, but features like SIP ALG open them up and rewrite call details inside, which is what can cause ServiceTitan call problems.
Disable SIP ALG for your network
Step 1: Confirm this workflow applies to you
You might need to disable SIP ALG if you see one or more of these symptoms:
Calls where only one side can hear audio.
Calls that drop at a consistent time, such as 10 seconds or 15 minutes.
Transfers that fail immediately when you send a call to a colleague.
Phantom calls that appear in logs but never ring a device.
Step 2: Identify your router or gateway
Find the main router or gateway that provides internet to your office. This might be an ISP-branded device (for example, AT&T, or Verizon) or a separate business router.
Look for the manufacturer and model number on the label. You'll use this to find the correct section below.
Step 3: Log in to your router
From a computer connected to your office network, open a web browser.
In the address bar, enter the router's IP address. Common addresses include:
192.168.1.1
192.168.0.1
10.1.10.1
When prompted, enter the administrator username and password.
Check the label on the device or your IT documentation.
If you don't know the credentials, contact your IT provider or Internet Service Provider.
Step 4: Turn off SIP ALG (generic steps)
Use these general steps if your router brand is not listed below or if the menus look different.
After you sign in, go to the advanced configuration or firewall area. Look for menu names such as:
Advanced
Firewall
Security
WAN
NAT or NAT Passthrough
In that area, look for a setting named SIP ALG or similar. Common names include:
SIP ALG
SIP Passthrough
SIP Helper
SIP Transformations
VoIP ALG
Turn the SIP ALG setting off.
When finished, save your changes.
Reboot your router if there is an option to do so. If not, you can power-cycle it manually.
If your router does not show any SIP ALG or VoIP ALG setting, check the manufacturer's support site or contact your IT provider.
Disable SIP ALG by router brand
Note: This information is sourced from manufacturer websites and user forums and has not been independently verified by ServiceTitan. The steps for your specific model or batch may differ. You may need to contact the manufacturer or your Internet Service Provider, or consult additional online resources, to get the current instructions.
Router Manufacturer | Steps to Disable SIP ALG |
|---|---|
Actiontec |
|
Adtran |
|
Arris | Most Arris gateways
Arris BGW210
|
Asus |
|
AT&T U-verse Pace 5268AC gateway | This device does not allow you to turn off SIP ALG directly.
|
Cisco | Work with a qualified IT provider before running CLI commands on Cisco equipment. General or enterprise-class Cisco routers
Cisco PIX
Cisco ASA
|
D-Link | General D-Link routers
D-Link DIR-655 example
|
Fortinet | Work with your IT provider before changing firewall helpers on Fortinet devices.
|
Linksys | Linksys Smart Wi-Fi (E-series)
Older Linksys models
|
Mikrotik | On Mikrotik devices, SIP ALG is called SIP Helper. Winbox GUI
|
Netgear | Netgear Genie interface
Other Netgear models
|
SonicWall |
|
TP-Link | Newer TP-Link (Archer series)
Older TP-Link devices (Telnet)
|
UBEE |
|
Ubiquiti | UniFi Security Gateway (USG)
EdgeRouter (ER-X and similar) Config Tree
CLI
|
Verizon FiOS G1100 | This device does not allow you to disable SIP ALG directly.
|
ZyXEL | ZyWALL / USG60
ZyXEL C1000Z / C1100Z (CenturyLink)
ZyXEL P600 (Telnet)
|
Reboot and test ServiceTitan calls
After you turn SIP ALG off, reboot your router or firewall.
Reboot your desk phones and any computers running a softphone.
Sign in to ServiceTitan and open your Contact Center Pro or softphone workspace.
Place several test calls:
Inbound calls to your main line.
Transfers between agents.
Outbound calls to external numbers.
If calls complete successfully without one-way audio, drops, or failed transfers, SIP ALG is likely resolved.
If issues continue, share this article and your test results with your IT provider or VoIP vendor so they can review other network causes (QoS, bandwidth, or cabling).