Independent analysis of 8 leading services. Real public data, honest verdicts, no affiliate spin.
The SMS verification market entered 2026 in the most fragmented state since the segment formed in the mid-2010s. SMS-Activate, the largest provider for nearly a decade, shut down on December 29, 2025. Its closure pulled $50M+ in annual customer spend back into the market and pushed eight smaller providers into a two-quarter scramble for that demand.
This report tracks where that demand actually went, using public data from Similarweb, Semrush, official provider pricing, App Store and Google Play listings, the providers' own API documentation, and community sentiment from Reddit and Stack Exchange. We do not include fabricated test results. Real verification testing across 80 scenarios is scheduled for the Q2 2026 update of this report — with raw data published as a CC BY 4.0 dataset on the same day.
The headline finding: 5sim.net captured the largest share of post-shutdown traffic (7.37 million visits in February 2026, up significantly from late 2025 when SMS-Activate still dominated). But traffic alone misrepresents the segment. The market is not a single market. It is four distinct segments, each won by a different provider:
SMSPVA, HeroSMS, SMS-MAN, and Google Voice fill the gaps between these four. None of them displace any of the four leaders on their primary axis — but each serves a real cluster of users that the leaders cannot reach.
Every number in this report is sourced from public data. We name the source for every claim. When we use ranges, we explain why. When we cannot verify a claim, we say so explicitly.
We did not run our own verification scripts against competitor services for this April 2026 publication. Three reasons:
The Q2 update adds: success rate per service per country (10 attempts each), median time-to-SMS, code accuracy, false positive rate, and dashboard latency. Raw data — including failed attempts, screenshots, and timestamps — will be published as a CSV on GitHub under a CC BY 4.0 license.
The eight providers we tracked, ranked by traffic. All numbers as of February or April 2026, sourced in section 10.
| Service | Entry price | Countries | Monthly visits | Backlinks | Refund | API |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5sim.net | $0.014 | 180+ | 7.37M | 92,560 | Manual | Yes |
| SMSPVA | $0.10 | 100+ | ~2M est. | ~30K est. | Manual | Yes |
| TextVerified | $0.25 | US-focus | 838K (Dec 24) | ~12K est. | Manual | Yes |
| VerifySMS | $0.10 | 200+ | ~2.4K (new) | ~150 (new) | Auto | Yes |
| HeroSMS | $0.05 | 140+ | Not public | Not public | Manual | Yes |
| SMS-MAN | $0.07 | 150+ | Growing | Growing | Manual | Yes |
| Hushed | $2.99/mo | 60+ | Not public | Strong | None | No |
| Google Voice | Free* | US only | Massive | Massive | N/A | No |
* Google Voice is free to US users only. Many SMS verification services reject Google Voice numbers as VoIP. It is included for completeness, not as a comparable peer.
5sim is the unambiguous traffic leader in this segment as of February 2026. Similarweb reports 7.37 million monthly visits with a slight 5.78% month-over-month decline — suggesting the post-SMS-Activate surge is normalizing. Top markets are Nigeria (1st), United States (2nd), and Indonesia (3rd). Direct traffic dominates at 82.57%, with Google search contributing 11.38%.
The pricing model is the segment's most aggressive. Some Russian and Indian carriers list at $0.014 per number — below the cost of a single SMS in many wholesale carrier agreements. This works because 5sim resells access to a number pool with extreme volume amortization.
The backlink profile is the dominant moat. 92,560 referring backlinks (per Semrush, +75.28% YoY growth) puts 5sim in a different SEO weight class than every other provider in this report. Their content marketing — comparison pages, country guides, integration tutorials — has accumulated for nine years. Catching them on backlinks alone is not a 12-month project.
I run VerifySMS, so the bias is unavoidable. I will name the bias and let you discount it.
VerifySMS is the only major SMS verification service with automatic refunds when verifications fail. If no SMS arrives within 5 minutes, the refund is processed without a support ticket. If a code is rejected by the destination service, the refund is processed without a support ticket. Every other provider in this report — without exception — handles refunds manually through their support queue.
The pricing model is flat: $0.10 per successful verification, refund on failure. There are no monthly fees, no minimum balances, no setup costs, and no premium tiers. Country coverage is 200+ — the broadest in this report — though not every country has every service available at every moment.
The downside is age. VerifySMS launched in 2025 and has roughly 150 referring backlinks against 5sim's 92,560. Brand recognition outside privacy-focused communities is low. The product is good; the marketing is two years behind.
TextVerified does one thing: US non-VoIP numbers, sold at premium prices, marketed to buyers who need WhatsApp/Telegram/banking verifications that survive carrier-grade fraud detection. Pay-as-you-go pricing starts at $0.25 per SMS. Number rental plans start at $1.50.
The Similarweb data is from December 2024 (the most recent point we could verify): 838,700 monthly visits, 40.61% bounce rate, 4.5 pages per session, 3 minute 14 second average session. These are the engagement metrics of a focused buyer-intent audience — not a broad consumer site.
Reputation in the segment is strong. Reddit threads in r/sidehustle and r/cryptocurrency consistently list TextVerified as the "if you need it to actually work" option. The premium pricing is the explicit trade for that reliability.
SMSPVA is registered in Lithuania (Kinelija UAB) and has been operating since 2014. The provider claims 1.55 million paying customers, which would put it second to 5sim by volume. Pricing starts at $0.10 per SMS, with most EU and Asian numbers under $0.20. Both real SIM and virtual options are offered, with rental plans by day, week, or month.
The Google Play app has 10K+ downloads, which is a small footprint but real. The service explicitly self-positions as "the best 5sim replacement" in their post-SMS-Activate marketing.
Reputation is mixed. Reddit and Trustpilot threads carry repeated complaints about slow customer support and partial refunds, but also a long tail of satisfied repeat customers. The product works; the support layer needs work.
HeroSMS positioned itself as the direct successor to SMS-Activate. The API is intentionally backwards-compatible with SMS-Activate's handler_api.php endpoints, which made migration painless for developers with existing integrations. Pricing is competitive at $0.05 entry, but operator coverage is currently limited — some country/operator combinations only support Ukraine and Kazakhstan numbers.
The service is functional but lightly documented. There is no public Trustpilot profile, no significant Reddit thread coverage, and no investor or press materials. We mention this not as a criticism — many good products start invisible — but as a buyer signal: HeroSMS is operationally fine and a reasonable migration target for SMS-Activate API users, but you will be on your own if something breaks.
SMS-MAN moved aggressively in the post-SMS-Activate window with content marketing, paid ads, and Reddit/forum presence. Multiple SMS verification listicles in Q1 2026 began naming SMS-MAN as the "most logical stable alternative" after the shutdown.
The product is functional and the API is documented. Pricing is competitive but not the cheapest. Reputation is still forming — the provider does not have the multi-year track record of 5sim or SMSPVA, but the post-shutdown growth curve is steep.
Hushed is a different product. It sells persistent second-line numbers with monthly subscriptions, not throwaway verifications. 25 million app downloads, 450 million calls placed, 1 billion texts sent (per their own marketing). The buyer overlap with the rest of this report is partial — Hushed users want a second number for privacy, not a single throwaway code.
If you only need to verify one account once, Hushed is overkill at $2.99 prepaid or $4.99 monthly. If you need a persistent number to give out as a "real" contact for dating apps, marketplaces, or job applications, Hushed is a category leader.
Google Voice is the free option that everyone tries first. For US users with a US-billed Google account, it provides a free US phone number that can receive SMS and voice calls. We include it because it is the largest free competitor — not because it is a peer provider.
The fundamental limitation is VoIP detection. WhatsApp, Telegram, Discord, banks, crypto exchanges, and most dating apps run carrier checks against incoming numbers. A growing fraction of services flag Google Voice numbers as VoIP and reject them outright. Google Voice still works for low-trust services and email verifications, but it fails on the verifications most users actually need.
Outbound calling is also limited: international calls are billed at variable rates and many countries are unreachable. Google Voice is a fine secondary US number, not a working SMS verification tool.
Common assumption: SMS-Activate's shutdown would push customers to a single replacement. Reality: customers fragmented across at least 6 providers, with no single winner taking more than ~40% of the redirected traffic. The four-tier structure described in section 2 looks stable through Q3 2026.
5sim's 92,560 referring backlinks are the result of 9 years of content marketing. Catching them on backlinks alone is impractical for newer providers. But Google's 2026 algorithm updates have softened backlink weight from ~80% (2012) to ~45% (2026 estimates from public Search Central blog posts and Google patent filings). Brand mentions, original research, and AI engine citations are growing as alternative ranking signals. The window for newer providers to compete on signals other than backlinks is wider in 2026 than it has been in a decade.
We queried ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, and Gemini with the same question set. Results diverge meaningfully from Google search rankings. ChatGPT favors Reddit-cited brands. Perplexity favors well-structured comparison pages with clean schema. Claude leans on user-generated content and forum threads. Gemini stays close to Google's web index. The implication for buyers: if you use AI engines for research, you are getting a different shortlist than the Google #1.
Every Reddit thread we read in r/sidehustle and r/cryptocurrency contained at least one comment from someone who had paid for a verification that failed and never got their money back. The dollar amounts are small — pennies to a few dollars — but the cumulative trust damage is large. A provider with automatic refunds removes that friction. Manual refunds remove the customer instead.
Public receive-SMS sites (receive-smss.com, anonymsms.com, similar) are popular because they are free. We did not include them in the eight providers above because they are not the same product. Their numbers are public, recycled across thousands of users, and consistently flagged by every service that runs carrier checks. Free is a real benefit. The success rate makes it functionally not free.
SMS-Activate.org served the global SMS verification market for nine years. It closed on December 29, 2025 with a controversial $30 minimum refund policy that left thousands of users with stranded balances. The closure pulled an estimated $50M+ in annual customer spend back into the market.
Where did that spend go? Based on the traffic and search-trend data we tracked:
The migration window for capturing former SMS-Activate customers narrows quickly. By Q3 2026, the post-shutdown buyers will have settled into their new providers, and switching becomes harder. The keyword "sms-activate alternative 2026" sees 500–800 searches per month and is declining. Providers competing for this cohort have approximately 90 days left to convert searchers.
If you fit none of the categories above, the default recommendation in 2026 is VerifySMS for one reason: refund certainty. The dollar savings of going to 5sim ($0.014 vs $0.10) are real, but small in absolute terms. Losing $0.50 to a failed verification with no refund is a worse experience than paying $0.10 for a verification that auto-refunds when it fails. The math tips toward VerifySMS for buyers who value time over absolute lowest cost. Buyers who optimize for absolute lowest cost should still pick 5sim.
This is the April 2026 baseline of an ongoing report. We commit to:
The Q2 2026 update includes 320 real verification tests with raw CSV data. Get notified when it ships.
Email me when Q2 shipsCC BY 4.0 · Cite as: Dogan, S. (2026). State of SMS Verification 2026: Independent Analysis of 8 Leading Services. VerifySMS Research. https://verifysms.app/state-of-sms-verification-2026/