About Callora

We think a phone call should belong to the two people having it.

Callora was born from a simple frustration: every modern calling app quietly routes your voice through someone else's cloud. We wanted the opposite — a network where the only thing connecting two people is a direct, encrypted line between their own devices.

A network with no centre
10Digit numbers, yours forever
P2PDirect WebRTC media path
5People per mesh conference
0msOf your voice on our servers
Our story

Built for the people on the line — not the middlemen.

Most calling platforms are built around a central server that receives, mixes and re-broadcasts everyone's audio. It's convenient for the company — and it means your conversation always passes through their hands. We started Callora to prove there's a better default.

By leaning entirely on peer-to-peer WebRTC, we keep ourselves out of your conversations. Our infrastructure does one humble job: introduce two members so their browsers can shake hands. After that, the line is theirs.

The journey

How we got here.

2024

A frustrating dropped call

Tired of per-minute fees and opaque clouds, our founders sketched a calling network with no middleman on a napkin.

2025

First peer-to-peer prototype

A bare-bones WebRTC dialer connected two browsers directly for the first time — no vendor, no relay for the audio.

2025

The 10-digit identity

We added a registry so every member gets a memorable number, making the network feel like the phone system everyone knows.

2026

Mesh conferences & launch

Five-way private mesh calling shipped, and Callora opened to the public — independent, encrypted, and free.

What we stand for

Three principles we won't compromise.

Privacy by design

Encryption isn't a feature we toggle on — it's the only way audio ever moves on Callora. If we can't read it, we can't leak it.

Independence

No Twilio, no Agora, no rented voice cloud. We own our signaling and rely on open standards, so the network answers to its members.

Radical simplicity

A number, a dial pad, a green button. Calling shouldn't need a manual — it should feel as natural as the phone always did.

Want to be part of it?

Claim your number and join a network built around the people actually on the call.

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