Company cell phone

Company cell phone
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Company cell phone: definition and delimitation

A company cell phone is a cell phone provided by the employer that is primarily used for work purposes. Depending on the company's internal regulations, private use may be permitted or excluded.

The term business cell phone is often used colloquially as a synonym, but is not clearly defined. In practice, it often simply refers to a cell phone used for business purposes - regardless of whether it is a company-owned device or a privately used device as part of BYOD.

Business cell phone is also a common term, especially in the public sector or in government agencies. It usually refers to a mobile phone connection that is clearly declared as business - regardless of ownership of the device. While a company cell phone can also be used privately (e.g. in the COPE model), a business cell phone is often intended exclusively for business purposes.

In contrast, the company cell phone is clearly defined as a company tool in organizational, legal and tax terms and is procured, managed and maintained centrally.

What are the benefits of a company cell phone?

  • Ensure availability: Employees with customer contact, field service or on-call duty remain reachable without having to use their private device.
  • Professional communication & higher productivity: Standardized numbers, central communication solutions and mobile business applications ensure more efficient processes, fewer communication breaks and faster response times. At the same time, company cell phones enable fast and secure access to internal company data, documents and tools, whether in the home office, on the road or at the customer's premises.
  • Employee benefit & employer attractiveness: A modern company cell phone that can also be used privately contributes to employer branding and can be an additional incentive for employee recruitment and retention.
  • Security & data protection: Mobile Device Management (MDM ) allows security standards to be implemented, devices to be managed remotely and data to be protected in the event of loss or theft. Company cell phones can be configured and controlled centrally - in contrast to many different private devices, which are often inadequately secured. This significantly reduces IT risks and makes it easier to comply with data protection regulations.

Concrete examples of the use of company cell phones in everyday working life

  • Sales: A sales representative uses her company cell phone for calls, mobile CRM access and coordinating appointments with customers. The ability to respond quickly and access customer data from any location noticeably improves customer service.
  • IT readiness: An IT admin receives critical system messages via the work device, even at night, without having to disclose their private number. This allows technical problems to be solved promptly and IT stability to be ensured.
  • Project management: A site manager coordinates daily construction site activities via calls, messenger and mobile construction plan apps. This enables smooth coordination on site and reduces misunderstandings.
  • Support hotline: Customer service employees with changing work locations use company cell phones to be reachable regardless of their location. This keeps service quality consistently high - even when working remotely.

Provision of company cell phones

When companies provide mobile work devices or allow their use, there are different deployment models to choose from for company cell phones and other mobile devices such as laptops or . These differ greatly in terms of security, control, employee comfort and costs. It is important to bear this in mind: The company cell phone can also be operated in different variants, in particular as a COBO or COPE.

  • Company cell phone in the COPE model (Corporate Owned, Personally Enabled): The device is the property of the company, employees may also use it privately - under certain conditions.
  • Company cell phone in the COBO model (Corporate Owned, Business Only): Also a company device, but intended exclusively for business purposes. This increases IT security, but restricts ease of use.
  • BYOD (Bring Your Own Device): Employees use private devices for work-related tasks. Advantages: Cost savings, user convenience. Disadvantages: high demands on data protection, security and support.

Note: The choice of model should match the corporate culture, the risk profile and the technical possibilities

Who gets a company cell phone - and when?

Not every employee needs a company cell phone. The allocation should be based on clear, comprehensible criteria.

Typical criteria for device allocation:

  • Role and position: Managers, field service, IT support, project management
  • Availability requirement: On-call service, on-call duty, customer contact outside office hours
  • Travel: Frequent business trips, mobile work locations, international cooperation
  • Technology requirements: access to internal tools, specific apps or communication solutions

Recommendation: The criteria and decision-making processes should be transparently documented in an internal company cell phone policy. This avoids unequal treatment and increases acceptance.

Is there a right to a new company cell phone?

No, there is no legal entitlement to a new or regularly replaced company cell phone. Whether and when a device is replaced depends on the company's specifications, typically depending on:

  • Age or condition of the device
  • Technical requirements of the activity
  • Security aspects (e.g. outdated operating systems)
  • internal replacement cycles (e.g. every two to three years)

Tip: It is advisable to formulate clear rules in the IT guideline. This ensures fairness and avoids discussions.

Procurement: buying, renting or leasing?

Nowadays, there is more than just one way to procure company cell phones. In addition to the classic purchase, leasing or rental models are also available. The choice of procurement method influences key factors such as budget, flexibility and administrative costs:

  • Capital expenditure: Buying involves high one-off costs, whereas renting and leasing are associated with predictable, regular payments.
  • Flexibility: Rental models allow short-term adjustments to team sizes or project requirements, while purchasing and leasing are usually tied to the long term.
  • Administrative effort: Rental or leasing providers often take on services such as device replacement, repair or return. When purchasing, this work usually has to be carried out by internal teams.

You can find a detailed comparison of the 3 models in our guide "Buying vs. leasing vs. renting IT equipment"

Company cell phone rental model

With Lendis, you can provide your employees with the right company cell phone in a flexible rental model.
Do you have any questions? Our team looks forward to hearing from you!

Decision criteria & practical tips

Decision criteria:

  • Operating system: iOS or Android? iPhones are considered particularly secure, Android offers more device choice.
  • Compatibility: Does the device work with internal software, VPNs and MDM systems?
  • Longevity: Devices with long-term update support (e.g. Apple or Samsung business devices) save costs in the long term.
  • Tariff model: Flat tariffs or pool contracts for data and calls offer more cost control.

Practical tips:

  • Standardize devices: Standardized models facilitate rollout, support and training.
  • Arrange support: Who takes care of defects, loss or questions?
  • Check insurance: Especially useful for high-priced devices or frequent travelers.

Recommendation: Here you will find a detailed guide to help you find the right smartphones for your employees.

Additional tasks for your teams

The issue of company cell phones is also accompanied by organizational and technical follow-up tasks:

  • Support & maintenance: Internal helpdesk or external partner must be responsible for setup, repairs, updates and replacement devices.
  • Inventory: Each device should be documented with serial number, user and issue/return date.
  • MDM management: Setting up and maintaining mobile device management solutions requires human and technical resources.

What to look out for when offboarding company cell phones

When employees leave or old devices are returned, a structured return process is essential - not only to get devices back, but also to minimize security risks, comply with data protection regulations and complete administrative processes cleanly:

  • Device return: Check completeness (incl. accessories), record external condition.
  • Data security: Delete company data or reset device completely, deactivate MDM access if necessary.
  • Documentation: Have the return confirmed, note it in the inventory list and, if necessary, pass it on or discard it.
One solution, all in one

Rent your company cell phones and benefit from comprehensive service + digital management. 

Private use & tax treatment of company cell phones

The private use of a company cell phone is permitted in many companies. However, there is no generally applicable regulation. Whether and to what extent employees are allowed to use a work device for private purposes depends on the respective company policy and should be explicitly regulated.

Legal & tax framework:

  • If the company cell phone is also used privately, there is no non-cash benefit in the tax sense (Section 3 No. 45 EStG) - provided that the device is provided by the employer. In this case, the non-cash benefit that would result from private use is exempt from tax.
  • The assumption of voice and data tariffs is also tax-free - regardless of the extent of private use.

What companies should consider:

  • User agreement: Clearly define whether and to what extent private use is permitted (e.g. international calls, app downloads).
  • Return & deletion: Devices must be returned when employees leave the company, if necessary with prior data deletion.
  • Minimize the risk of misuse: MDM solutions allow business and private data to be clearly separated.

Tip: In the case of intensive private use, the tax office may request proof that it is still a business device - so document it!