Frequently Asked Questions
Use a reputable SMS provider like Twilio, Sinch, MessageBird, or Plivo. Their APIs offer integration with Taiwan's specific requirements. Remember to handle long codes appropriately, as sender IDs are often modified upon delivery.
Taiwan's mobile market is highly developed, but while apps like LINE are popular for personal use, SMS remains vital for business needs like authentication and marketing. Key operators include Chunghwa Telecom, Taiwan Mobile, and Far EasTone.
Alphanumeric sender IDs are not supported for direct use, and long code sender IDs are modified by carriers. This is part of Taiwan's regulatory framework aimed at preventing spam and ensuring proper identification of message senders.
Avoid sending promotional messages between 9:00 PM and 9:00 AM, and also during the lunch break from 12:30 PM to 1:30 PM Taiwan Standard Time (GMT+8). Emergency and service messages are exempt.
No, sending SMS messages to landline numbers in Taiwan is not supported. Attempts will result in a 400 response error (code 21614) with no message delivery and no charge incurred.
Standard SMS messages are 160 characters (GSM-7) or 70 characters (UCS-2). However, for Chinese characters, the limit is 65 characters per SMS. Longer messages will be concatenated.
Obtain explicit consent for marketing messages, adhere to strict time restrictions, register URLs with carriers, and regularly check numbers against the Do Not Call (DNC) registry managed by the NCC.
Gambling, adult content, financial loans, political or religious messages, controlled substances, alcohol, and links to messaging apps like WhatsApp or LINE are all prohibited in SMS content.
All marketing SMS must include opt-out instructions (STOP, CANCEL, etc. in both English and Chinese), and businesses are required to process and remove numbers from lists within 24 hours of the request.
Shortened URLs are strictly prohibited. Use full-length URLs and pre-register them with local carriers to ensure successful delivery and avoid content filtering issues.
Use UCS-2 encoding for messages containing Chinese characters. This ensures proper display on recipients' devices, especially given the prevalence of Android devices (around 65% market share).
Explicit consent, either written or electronic, is mandatory for marketing messages. Double opt-in, storing consent details (time, source), and regularly updating consent status are best practices.
The article does not detail specific penalties, but mentions that SMS communications are regulated by the National Communications Commission (NCC) and governed by the Telecommunications Act.
The National Communications Commission (NCC) website (www.ncc.gov.tw) and the Ministry of Justice website for the Personal Data Protection Act (www.moj.gov.tw/EN/pdpa) offer further resources.
Taiwan SMS Best Practices, Compliance, and Features
Send SMS messages in Taiwan compliantly. This guide covers NCC regulations, PDPA requirements, time restrictions, mandatory consent rules, and technical requirements for Traditional Chinese messaging across Chunghwa Telecom, Taiwan Mobile, and Far EasTone networks.
Taiwan SMS Market Overview
Market Conditions: Taiwan has near-universal smartphone penetration. OTT messaging apps like LINE dominate personal communications, but SMS remains crucial for authentication, notifications, and marketing. Major operators include Chunghwa Telecom, Taiwan Mobile, and Far EasTone. Android devices hold approximately 65% market share, with iOS accounting for most of the remainder. For broader context on international SMS standards, see our E.164 phone format guide.
Market Share: As of 2025, Chunghwa Telecom holds approximately 35% of Taiwan's mobile market, Taiwan Mobile approximately 28%, and Far EasTone approximately 22%, with smaller operators APTG and T Star sharing the remainder.
Taiwan SMS Features and Capabilities
Taiwan supports most standard SMS features with restrictions on sender IDs and content types. Comply with strict NCC requirements for business messaging.
Two-way SMS in Taiwan
Two-way SMS is not supported in Taiwan for A2P (Application-to-Person) messaging. Taiwan's telecommunications carriers impose this restriction to prevent SMS spam, fraud (smishing), and unauthorized commercial communications. The sender ID overwriting mechanism – which replaces sender IDs with random Taiwan numbers – makes reply routing technically impossible, as replies cannot be directed back to the original sender.
Alternative Solutions for Two-Way Communication:
Concatenated Messages (Segmented SMS)
Support: Yes, though availability varies by sender ID type.
Message length rules: Standard SMS length is 160 characters (GSM-7) or 70 characters (UCS-2) before splitting. For Chinese characters, the maximum is 65 characters per SMS.
Encoding considerations: Both GSM-7 and UCS-2 encoding are supported. Messages containing Chinese characters automatically use UCS-2 encoding.
Character Counting and Cost Examples:
Keep messages under 65 Chinese characters or 160 GSM-7 characters to minimize costs and ensure single-segment delivery.
MMS Support
MMS messages are automatically converted to SMS with an embedded URL link. Register and allowlist your URLs with local carriers to prevent delivery failures when sending media content.
Recipient Phone Number Compatibility
Number Portability
Number portability is available in Taiwan. Carriers handle routing automatically, so number portability does not significantly impact message delivery.
Sending SMS to Landlines
You cannot send SMS to landline numbers in Taiwan. Attempts result in a 400 response error (code 21614) with no message delivery and no charge.
Number Validation: Taiwan landline numbers start with area codes (02 for Taipei, 03–09 for other regions) and are 8–9 digits total. Mobile numbers always start with 09 and are 10 digits (e.g., +886 9XX XXX XXX). Implement validation logic to filter landlines before sending:
Taiwan SMS Regulations: NCC Compliance Requirements
Comply with Taiwan's SMS regulations set by the National Communications Commission (NCC) and the Telecommunications Act. Follow the Personal Data Protection Act (PDPA, 個人資料保護法) when handling customer data and sending messages. These regulations are similar to other Asia-Pacific markets - compare with Singapore SMS regulations for regional context.
Regulatory Authorities:
Penalties for Non-Compliance:
Consent and Opt-In
Explicit Consent Requirements:
Consent Record Retention: The PDPA does not mandate a specific retention period for general consent records, but industry regulations require retaining records associated with personal data usage for at least 5 years. If other laws prescribe a longer retention period, follow that requirement. Retain consent records for 5–7 years from the date of last communication. For U.S. businesses, consider how these requirements align with 10DLC SMS registration for domestic campaigns.
Best Practices for Consent:
HELP/STOP and Other Commands
Implementation Example:
Do Not Call / Do Not Disturb Registries
Taiwan maintains a national Do Not Call (DNC) registry managed by the NCC:
DNC Registry Access: As of 2025, Taiwan's DNC registry for mobile phones is not as centrally managed as in some countries (e.g., Singapore's DNC registry). Maintain your own suppression lists and honor opt-out requests. Coordinate with your SMS provider to implement:
Time Zone Sensitivity
Strict Time Restrictions:
Timezone-Aware Scheduling Example:
Public Holiday Considerations: Avoid sending promotional SMS during major Taiwan holidays: Lunar New Year (typically late January/early February_ 7-day period)_ Dragon Boat Festival (5th day of 5th lunar month)_ Mid-Autumn Festival (15th day of 8th lunar month)_ and Double Ten National Day (October 10). Transactional messages (OTP_ order confirmations) are acceptable.
Phone Numbers Options and SMS Sender Types for Taiwan
Alphanumeric Sender ID
Operator network capability: Not supported for direct use
Registration requirements: No pre-registration available
Sender ID preservation: Sender IDs are overwritten with random Taiwan long codes at the carrier level
What happens to sender IDs: When you send an SMS with an alphanumeric sender ID (e.g._ "MyBrand")_ Taiwan carriers automatically replace it with a random Taiwan mobile number (format +886 9XX XXX XXX). Recipients see a numeric sender_ not your brand name. This carrier-level overwriting prevents reply routing and brand recognition.
Workaround: Include your brand name in the first 67 characters of the message body. As of November 1_ 2025_ all commercial SMS must include the company_ organization_ brand_ or campaign name within the message content for NCC compliance.
Long Codes
Domestic vs. International:
Sender ID preservation: No_ original sender IDs are not preserved
Provisioning time: Immediate to 24 hours
Use cases: Transactional messages_ alerts_ notifications
Carrier-Specific Differences:
Short Codes
Support: Not currently available in Taiwan
Provisioning time: N/A
Use cases: N/A
Restricted SMS Content_ Industries_ and Use Cases
Prohibited Content and Industries:
Prohibited Keywords Examples (avoid these in message content):
Content Filtering
Carrier Filtering Rules:
URL Registration Process:
Carrier Contact Details:
Tips to Avoid Blocking:
Taiwan SMS Best Practices for Businesses
Messaging Strategy
Message Template Examples:
Sending Frequency and Timing
Timezone Conversion Best Practices (sending from abroad):
Localization
Cultural Considerations:
Opt-Out Management
Database Schema Recommendation:
Testing and Monitoring
Taiwan Market KPIs and Benchmarks:
SMS API Integration for Taiwan: Provider Comparison
Twilio
Twilio provides a RESTful API for sending SMS messages to Taiwan. Authenticate using your Account SID and Auth Token.
Sinch
Sinch uses Bearer token authentication and provides a REST API for SMS delivery.
MessageBird
MessageBird offers a straightforward REST API with comprehensive delivery reporting.
Plivo
Plivo provides a REST API with authentication via Basic Auth using your Auth ID and Auth Token.
API Provider Comparison:
Note: Pricing varies by volume commitments and contract terms. Contact providers for current Taiwan-specific rates.
API Rate Limits and Throughput
Provider-Specific Rate Limits:
Error Handling and Reporting
Common Taiwan-Specific Error Codes:
Recap and Additional Resources
Key Takeaways
Compliance Priorities
Technical Considerations
Content Requirements (Effective November 1, 2025)
Implementation Checklist
Pre-Launch (Weeks 1–2)
Development (Weeks 2–4)
Testing (Week 5)
Launch & Monitor (Week 6+)
Next Steps
Additional Resources
Note: Taiwan mobile phone numbers follow the format +886 9XX XXX XXX (country code +886 followed by 9 digits starting with 9). All mobile numbers begin with the digit 9 after the country code.
Industry Associations:
Market Context: LINE has over 21 million users in Taiwan (approximately 90% of the population), making it the dominant OTT platform. SMS remains essential for authentication, transactional notifications, and reaching users without app access.
Troubleshooting FAQ
Q: My messages aren't being delivered. What should I check? A: Verify: (1) Number format is +886 9XX XXX XXX, (2) Sending during allowed hours (9AM–12:30PM, 1:30PM–9PM TST), (3) URLs are pre-registered, (4) Brand name is included in first 67 characters.
Q: Can I use bit.ly or other URL shorteners? A: No. Shortened URLs are strictly prohibited in Taiwan. Use full-length URLs registered with your carrier.
Q: How do I register my URLs with carriers? A: Contact your SMS provider's support team with your full URLs and business documentation. Allow 3–5 business days for approval.
Q: What happens if I send during restricted hours? A: Messages may be blocked by carriers, and repeated violations can result in fines up to NT$50,000 per sender ID plus 2-month registration suspension.
Q: Do I need different sender IDs for transactional vs. marketing messages? A: While not required, it's best practice to use separate sender IDs. Taiwan carriers may apply different filtering rules based on content type.