Bandwidth has launched Bandwidth Build, a developer platform designed to let AI agents and developers provision communications services, access Bandwidth APIs through an MCP server, and launch voice applications using automated workflows.
Bandwidth Inc. announced Bandwidth Build, a platform that gives AI agents and developers autonomous access to its Bandwidth Communications Cloud for provisioning communications services and launching voice applications.
According to Bandwidth’s announcement distributed by PR Newswire, Bandwidth Build is intended to support developers and AI agents that need to set up communications capabilities without relying on traditional manual provisioning steps. The company says the platform allows users to autonomously provision services, access Bandwidth APIs through a Model Context Protocol, or MCP, server, and launch voice applications through automated workflows.
StockTitan, republishing the PRNewswire release, described the product as a platform for AI agents and developers to autonomously provision communications services and launch voice applications on the Bandwidth Communications Cloud.
Bandwidth’s own Build sign-up page presents the offering as a self-serve developer experience for its Voice API. The page says users can start with a free trial that includes a U.S. phone number and 3,000 credits. Bandwidth lists developers, agentic workflows, and startups among the intended use cases for the service.
The MCP server reference is notable because it points to a way for AI systems to interact with software tools and APIs through a structured interface. In Bandwidth’s description, the MCP server gives AI agents a route to access Bandwidth APIs as part of automated workflows.
The company’s announcement frames this as autonomous access to communications infrastructure rather than simply another dashboard or developer portal. Based on the materials provided by Bandwidth and PRNewswire, the initial emphasis is on voice applications and communications provisioning.
Bandwidth’s Build page focuses on getting started with its Voice API. The company says the self-serve experience includes a free trial, a U.S. number, and credits that can be used as developers test the service.
The stated use cases include conventional developer experimentation as well as agentic workflows, which suggests Bandwidth is positioning the service for software systems that can perform setup and operational tasks with less human intervention. The announcement does not provide detailed customer adoption figures, pricing beyond the free-trial description, or independent performance benchmarks.
Communications APIs are commonly used to add calling, messaging, routing, and number-management features to applications. Bandwidth’s announcement focuses specifically on reducing friction for voice-application development and provisioning on its own cloud platform.
The company’s claims are limited to its own platform capabilities: autonomous provisioning, access to Bandwidth APIs through an MCP server, and workflow-based voice application launch. The available source material does not establish how Bandwidth Build compares with competing communications API platforms, nor does it provide third-party testing of reliability, latency, or developer productivity improvements.
Bandwidth Build is a new self-serve platform aimed at developers and AI agents working with voice communications. Based on Bandwidth’s PRNewswire announcement and its Build sign-up page, the product combines autonomous provisioning, MCP-based API access, and a free-trial path for its Voice API.
For developers experimenting with agentic workflows in communications infrastructure, the launch provides a concrete example of how API providers are adapting their tools for automated software agents. For now, the public information is strongest on the product’s positioning and onboarding features, while details such as broader availability, long-term pricing, and independent usage results remain outside the provided source material.
announced Bandwidth Build, a platform that gives AI agents and developers autonomous access to its Bandwidth Communications Cloud for provisioning communications services and launching voice applications.
The company says the platform allows users to autonomously provision services, access Bandwidth APIs through a Model Context Protocol, or MCP, server, and launch voice applications through automated workflows.
Bandwidth’s own Build sign up page presents the offering as a self serve developer experience for its Voice API.
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