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Guides

After-hours call answering: in-house, service, or AI?

2026-05-15 · 8 min read · By Asad Mohammad

Friday at 6:38pm. An electrician finishes a tenant rewire in Etobicoke, sits in his van, and looks at the missed-call count on his work phone. Twelve in the last three hours. He doesn't recognize four of them. The other eight are existing customers, three of whom probably needed something fast and gave up. He's tired. He doesn't want to dial twelve numbers. He doesn't want them going to voicemail either.

Every service-business owner eventually lands in some version of this evening. The question isn't whether to do something about after-hours coverage. It's which version of "something" earns out for your shop.

The three real options

Service businesses choose between three after-hours answering structures.

In-house staffing. Someone you employ is on the phone after hours, either as a dedicated overnight person or via a rotation among your existing team. Pay is hourly or shift-based. They learn your business deeply because they ARE your business.

Live human answering service. A vendor like Smith.ai, Ruby, AnswerConnect, or PATLive picks up forwarded calls 24/7 with a US-based team. They follow a custom script you wrote with their onboarding team, take messages, sometimes book appointments, and dispatch the lead back to you. Billing is per-minute against a monthly bucket.

AI receptionist. Software picks up forwarded or missed calls, qualifies the lead per a configurable intake flow, sends a text or holds a voice conversation, and posts captured leads to your dashboard. Billing is flat monthly.

The choice between them isn't about quality. All three can be done well. It's about volume, ticket size, and how much human-judgment your typical caller actually needs.

When in-house wins

A real hire earns out when the phone is one part of a larger job. Walk-ins, supplier ordering, parts pickup, customer follow-ups, accountant-call relays. If you've got enough non-phone work to keep a competent receptionist busy for 30 hours a week, they're probably worth what they cost.

The math on a part-time hire runs around $20-30K/year fully loaded for 20-25 hours a week of coverage. That's roughly 80-100 hours of phone presence a month. The rest of the time, the phone is uncovered. That's where the gap shows up.

For shops where after-hours volume is the bigger problem and there's no daytime office work to absorb a hire, a person sitting at a desk is over-spec for the actual job. The phone gets covered when she's there. The other 60% of the week is still voicemail.

The hidden cost of an in-house hire

The fully-loaded cost of a receptionist isn't just wage. It's wage plus payroll taxes plus benefits plus the desk and computer plus the manager's time training them. For a single hire, that overhead usually adds 25-35% on top of the headline salary. Worth running before you commit to the line item.

Related reading
  • What a missed service call actually costs your shop
  • Answering service vs. AI receptionist: which fits a 5-person shop?
  • The case for flat-rate pricing on call answering

When a human answering service wins

The traditional human answering service is well-fitted for low-volume, high-judgment calls.

A specialty law firm doing high-stakes new-client intake, or a real estate brokerage where every inbound is a $1M-plus listing inquiry. In those cases, the caller is judging the business by the voice that answers. A polished, US-based, human receptionist is part of the brand. Paying $2-$3 per minute is fine because the average call leads to thousands of dollars in revenue.

The math gets harder when call volume rises. A plumbing shop pushing 150 missed calls a month at an average 3-minute call length burns 450 minutes. That's a $1,000+ monthly bill on most per-minute services, just to take messages. The shop isn't getting $2-3K of new revenue per minute the way a law firm does. So the math doesn't compete.

The other place human services fall short is the response-time floor. A receptionist takes the call, takes the message, and texts or emails the owner. By the time the message lands, the homeowner has called the next number. The receptionist is fast for what they are. They're not as fast as a 5-second automated text-back can be.

The category-level comparison of human answering services covers the trade-offs in more detail by vendor.

When an AI receptionist wins

AI receptionists fit best when call volume is non-trivial, most calls are routine triage, and flat pricing matters more than a polished voice.

A typical fit case: a 3-5 truck plumbing or HVAC operation with steady inbound during the day and uncovered after-hours. 100-300 missed calls a month. Most calls are 2-4 minute conversations that follow a predictable shape: name, address, issue, urgency, timing. The qualification questions are stable enough that they don't need a human asking them.

For this shop, an AI receptionist captures the lead in a structured form, books obvious jobs into a connected calendar, escalates anything that doesn't fit the standard intake to the owner via SMS, and stops the voicemail leak entirely. The cost is flat: a single monthly subscription that doesn't move with call volume.

Depending on how the shop configures it, the AI either picks up the call directly (AI-first) or steps in only when the owner's phone has rung out (human-first). Avidra supports both modes. Most shops in the trades pick human-first during business hours so their existing phone still rings on the line, and let AI handle after-hours and overflow.

A decision framework

The decision usually has two axes.

The first is how much non-phone work you have to absorb a hire. If the answer is "a lot," in-house is at least worth modeling. If the answer is "the phone is the job," a hire is over-spec.

The second is how human-shaped your calls are. If every call needs custom judgment (legal intake or medical triage are the obvious cases), human service or in-house hire wins. If most calls fit a predictable script (most trades intake), AI handles it well at a fraction of the cost.

Response speed is often the tiebreaker. If "within an hour" is good enough for your caller, any of the three works. If "within 5 seconds" matters because your typical caller is a homeowner who's already opened the next plumber's website, only AI hits that speed.

Most service businesses end up in some hybrid: hire for daytime front-office work, AI for missed-call recovery and after-hours. Some run all three: hire + AI + human service for specific call types. The right mix is the one where each tool is doing the job it's actually best at.

The math nobody runs first

The cheap thing to do before committing to any vendor: count your actual after-hours call volume.

Pull two weeks of phone log. Filter for calls outside business hours. Count them. Multiply by your average ticket size. Multiply that by some fraction (0.3 to 0.6 depending on how time-sensitive your typical caller is) to estimate the conversion you're losing.

That's the dollar value of the problem. Compare it to the cost of each option. If your after-hours lost-conversion is $3,000/month and a human service costs $800/month, the service earns out. If it's $300/month and the service still costs $800, the service doesn't earn out and AI at $49 probably does.

Most owners haven't done this math because nobody told them to. Once you've done it, the decision is usually clear.

You can read the hire-vs-AI breakdown, see the human-service category comparison, or jump to pricing. None of them is the right answer for every shop. The math against your own phone log is.