Comparison
CrewTalk vs Microsoft Teams Walkie Talkie
Teams Walkie Talkie is a small feature bolted onto a massive enterprise platform. CrewTalk is purpose-built for push-to-talk — no Microsoft 365 license required, no bloated app to run, and no compromises on field-ops features.
At a Glance
CrewTalk
- Type
- Purpose-built PTT app
- Pricing
- Free / $5 user/mo / Team Plans from $49/mo
- Free tier
- Yes (business use allowed)
- Mobile-first
- Yes
- Offline mode
- Yes (Local Mode)
Microsoft Teams Walkie Talkie
- Type
- Feature within Microsoft Teams
- Pricing
- $4–8/user/mo (M365 required)
- Free tier
- No
- Mobile-first
- No (Teams is desktop-first)
- Offline mode
- No
Pricing Comparison
Teams Walkie Talkie is not free — it requires a paid Microsoft 365 Frontline or Business license for every user. CrewTalk Team Plans offer flat-rate pricing with significant savings.
| Team Size | Teams Walkie Talkie | CrewTalk | You Save |
|---|---|---|---|
| 15 users | $120/mo | $49/mo | 59% |
| 40 users | $320/mo | $119/mo | 63% |
| 75 users | $600/mo | $199/mo | 67% |
| 125 users | $1,000/mo | $299/mo | 70% |
Based on Microsoft 365 F3 at $8/user/month. Walkie Talkie requires a paid M365 license and is not available on free Teams. CrewTalk Team Plans include full Pro features for every member.
Feature Comparison
| Feature | CrewTalk | Teams Walkie Talkie |
|---|---|---|
| Push-to-Talk | ✓ | ✓ |
| Text Messaging | ✓ | ✓ Via Teams chat |
| Presence Indicators | ✓ | ✓ Via Teams |
| Role Management | ✓ | ✓ Via Teams admin |
| Web Dashboard | ✓ | ✓ Teams admin center |
| Bluetooth PTT Headset | ✓ | ✗ |
| Smartwatch PTT | ✓ | ✗ |
| Local Mode (Offline PTT) | ✓ | ✗ |
| Tally Light Trigger | ✓ | ✗ |
| Latch Talk (Hands-Free Lock) | ✓ | ✗ |
| Channel Monitoring | ✓ | ✗ |
| All Call Broadcast | ✓ | ✗ |
| All Text Broadcast | ✓ | ✗ |
| QR Code Joining | ✓ | ✗ |
| Live-Sight Video | ✓ | ~ Teams video (separate) |
| Free Tier | ✓ | ✗ |
| Standalone App (No Platform Required) | ✓ | ✗ Requires full Teams app |
Why Teams Choose CrewTalk Over Teams Walkie Talkie
No Microsoft 365 Required
Teams Walkie Talkie is locked behind a paid Microsoft 365 Frontline or Business license. That means every crew member needs an M365 account before they can use PTT — a significant cost and administrative overhead, especially for freelancers and short-term hires. CrewTalk works as a standalone app with a free tier that is ready for business use. No enterprise platform subscription required.
Purpose-Built, Not Bolted On
Walkie Talkie is a small feature inside a massive enterprise communication platform. It was added to Teams as an afterthought for frontline workers, not designed from the ground up for push-to-talk communication. CrewTalk is built entirely around the PTT workflow. Every screen, every interaction, every feature is designed for teams that need to communicate quickly and reliably in the field.
Lighter and Faster
The full Microsoft Teams app is heavy. It consumes significant battery, takes up considerable storage, and presents a complex interface that field workers need to navigate past just to reach the Walkie Talkie feature. CrewTalk is lean and focused — a lightweight app that does one thing exceptionally well. Your crew opens it and they are ready to talk, with no distractions and minimal battery impact.
Works Without Internet
Microsoft Teams requires a constant cloud connection to function. If you are in a venue basement, a remote outdoor location, or anywhere with spotty internet, Teams Walkie Talkie stops working entirely. CrewTalk's Local Mode enables push-to-talk over any local WiFi network with no internet connection needed. When connectivity is unreliable, your communication should not be.
Production-Ready Features
CrewTalk includes specialized features that production crews depend on daily. Tally Light trigger lets directors signal on-air status to the entire crew. Latch Talk locks the microphone open for hands-free operation. Bluetooth headset PTT buttons let crew members transmit without reaching for their phone. Channel monitoring allows supervisors to listen across multiple channels simultaneously. These are operational tools that Teams simply does not offer and was never designed to support.
