A virtual receptionist is any receptionist function delivered remotely, whether by a person, by software, or by a mix of both. An AI receptionist is specifically the software kind: an AI voice agent built to answer calls and handle front-desk tasks. So every AI receptionist is a virtual receptionist, but not every virtual receptionist is AI. The terms get used interchangeably in marketing, which is why they’re so easy to confuse.
This is a neutral guide to what separates the two, what each one costs, and how a business decides between them.
What a virtual receptionist actually is
“Virtual receptionist” describes a role, not a technology. It’s the front-desk job - answering calls, taking messages, booking appointments, routing inquiries, capturing leads - done remotely instead of by someone sitting at your premises.
That role can be filled three ways:
- Human. A remote agent, often in a shared call center, answering for several businesses at once.
- Software (AI). An AI voice agent that picks up and handles the call itself.
- Hybrid. AI handles routine calls; a human steps in for anything complex or sensitive.
When a vendor says “virtual receptionist,” you can’t tell from the word alone which of these you’re getting. That’s the whole source of the confusion.
What an AI receptionist is
An AI receptionist is the software version of that role: an AI voice agent configured specifically for receptionist tasks. It uses speech recognition to understand the caller, language processing to work out what they need, and voice synthesis to reply, all in real time over a normal phone call.
Instead of “press 1 for bookings,” the caller just explains what they want, and the AI responds, asks follow-up questions, captures the details, and either books, routes, or takes a message. The business gets a structured summary of every call.
AI receptionist vs virtual receptionist, side by side
| Human virtual receptionist | AI receptionist | |
|---|---|---|
| Who answers | A remote person | Software |
| Availability | Business or staffed hours | 24/7, no breaks |
| Pricing model | Usually per call or per minute | Usually flat monthly fee |
| Scales with volume | Cost rises with calls | Cost stays flat |
| Handles nuance | Strong - human judgement | Strong within a defined scope |
| Consistency | Varies by agent and day | Identical every call |
| Best for | Low volume, complex or sensitive calls | Missed-call coverage, steady volume, after-hours |
Both are “virtual receptionists.” The difference is who, or what, picks up.
The numbers behind the choice
Most businesses look at a virtual receptionist because calls are going unanswered. Invoca estimates around 26% of calls to businesses go unanswered, rising above 60% in some industries, and that fewer than 3% of callers sent to voicemail leave a message. A missed call is usually just lost.
Callers also have a clear preference for a real exchange over a machine that makes them work. In a 2019 survey of 501 US consumers by Clutch, 88% said they’d rather speak to a live agent than navigate a phone menu. A modern AI receptionist aims to close that gap by holding a conversation rather than presenting a menu - which is what separates it from older IVR systems.
Adoption of conversational AI for this kind of work is climbing: Gartner reported that 85% of customer service leaders planned to explore or pilot a customer-facing conversational AI solution during 2025.
How to choose
The deciding factors are usually volume, complexity, and budget shape:
- Call volume. Per-call human pricing is fine at low volume and painful at high volume. Flat-fee AI is the opposite.
- Call complexity. Highly sensitive, emotional, or unpredictable calls favour a human, or a hybrid with human escalation.
- Coverage. If the problem is missed calls after hours and at weekends, AI covers 24/7 without overtime.
- Consistency. AI says the same thing every time. Humans bring judgement but also variation.
- Integrations. If you need appointments written into a calendar or details pushed to a CRM, check the system actually connects to your tools.
A common pattern: use an AI receptionist for everyday calls and keep a human escalation path for the cases that genuinely need one.
The bottom line
A virtual receptionist is the role. An AI receptionist is one way to fill it - the software way. If you’re comparing options, don’t stop at the label. Ask who or what answers the call, how it’s priced, whether it’s available when your calls actually come in, and whether it connects to the tools you already use.
Related reading: AI voice agents vs IVR vs virtual receptionists vs voice assistants for the full taxonomy, and what actually happens when an AI answers your business calls.