This article describes Microsoft’s support for 911 emergency calling location information in the United States. This support ensures that the most precise dispatchable location information possible is provided for Teams users making emergency calls. Regardless of the caller’s location–onsite or working from home–a caller’s location information sent to the Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) must be accurate.
This article includes information about Microsoft’s compliance with the RAY BAUM’S Act for Multi Line Telephone Systems (MLTS). The RAY BAUM’S Act extends the Kari’s Law requirements, which went into effect in early 2021. For more information about the RAY BAUM’S Act and Kari’s Law, see Dispatchable Location for 911 Calls and Multi-line Telephone Systems – Kari’s Law and RAY BAUM’S Act 911 Direct Dialing, Notification, and Dispatchable Location Requirements.
This article is for administrators and IT professionals. It describes how you can configure user policies so that the users in your organization can set their own emergency addresses if applicable. For information about how your users can enable location services, see Enable location services.
Various device management applications can also enable location sharing. Enabling location sharing to Teams varies by operating systems.
Although this information applies to emergency 911 calling in the United States, user-entered locations will be conveyed to the screening center in Canada as well.
Support for emergency calling location information
Emergency addresses for Teams can be categorized by different types. The following list shows the location precedence used when an emergency number is dialed:
- A dynamically acquired address defined by the tenant administer in the Location Information Service.
- An address the end user confirmed, edited, or manually entered which is associated to the local network the Teams client is connected to.
- An address automatically suggested by the operating system.
- An address the administrator statically assigns to the user.
Emergency address classification and routing
The following table shows the types of emergency addresses and associated routing methods for each type: whether the call is automatically routed to the serving PSAP or screened for accuracy before transferring to the serving PSAP. This routing behavior is supported in the United States for all Calling Plan users, Operator Connect partners, and Direct Routing certified emergency calling service providers.
Type of emergency address | Emergency routing method |
Dynamically acquired emergency address defined by administrator. | Direct to PSAP. |
Emergency address obtained from the operating system without confirmation for accuracy by the user. | Screened and Transferred to PSAP. |
Emergency address obtained from the operating system with confirmation for accuracy by the user. | Direct to PSAP. |
Emergency address obtained from the operating system and edited through address autosuggest. | Direct to PSAP. |
Emergency address obtained from the operating system and manually edited and confirmed by the user. | Screened and Transferred to PSAP. |
Emergency address entered manually and confirmed by the user. | Screened and Transferred to PSAP. |
Emergency address entered through address autosuggest and confirmed by the user. | Direct to PSAP. |
Emergency address statically assigned to the user/number. | Screened and Transferred to PSAP. |
Null | Screened and Transferred to PSAP. |
Enable end users to configure their emergency address
Using the Microsoft Teams admin center
- In the left navigation of the Microsoft Teams admin center, go to Voice > Emergency policies.
- Select Add.
- Enter a name for the emergency calling policy, for example, “E911WFH”.
- Turn on External location lookup mode.
- Select Apply.
Assign a custom emergency calling policy to users
You can assign a policy directly to users, either individually or at scale through a batch assignment (if supported for the policy type), or to a group that the users are members of (if supported for the policy type).
Notes and restrictions
Keep the following in mind:
- The work-from-home experience described is for Teams desktop on Windows and Mac.
- Teams phones do not support the work-from-home experience.
- Teams mobile supports automatic location detection but not the user entered experience described.
- Privacy settings can conflict with automatic location detection – Mobile Device Management systems can be used.