---
title: "Bandwidth Monitoring Text Alerts: Catch Circuit Saturation Before the Help Desk Does"
url: "https://textbolt.com/use-case/bandwidth-monitoring-text-alerts/"
date: "2026-05-04T03:02:42-07:00"
modified: "2026-06-04T05:01:05-07:00"
author:
  name: "Rakesh Patel"
word_count: 2589
reading_time: "13 min read"
summary: "Bandwidth Monitoring Text Alerts"
description: "Bandwidth monitoring text alerts to NOC, WAN engineers, capacity planners from PRTG, SolarWinds NPM, OpManager, Auvik, Datadog. Catch saturation in 30 min."
keywords: "Bandwidth Monitoring Text Alerts"
language: "en"
schema_type: "WebPage"
---

# Bandwidth Monitoring Text Alerts: Catch Circuit Saturation Before the Help Desk Does

_Published: May 4, 2026_  
_Author: Rakesh Patel_  

![Bandwidth Monitoring Alerts](https://wp.textbolt.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/BandwidthMonitoringAlertsviaSMS-convert.io_-1024x538.webp)

<svg fill="none" height="16" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="16"><path d="M22 16.92v3a2 2 0 0 1-2.18 2 19.79 19.79 0 0 1-8.63-3.07 19.5 19.5 0 0 1-6-6 19.79 19.79 0 0 1-3.07-8.67A2 2 0 0 1 4.11 2h3a2 2 0 0 1 2 1.72c.127.96.361 1.903.7 2.81a2 2 0 0 1-.45 2.11L8.09 9.91a16 16 0 0 0 6 6l1.27-1.27a2 2 0 0 1 2.11-.45c.907.339 1.85.573 2.81.7A2 2 0 0 1 22 16.92z"></path></svg>Bandwidth Monitoring Text Alerts When a branch circuit saturates mid-day, your help desk gets the tickets before your NOC sees the graph. Send text bandwidth saturation alerts from any network monitoring tool (PRTG, SolarWinds NPM, OpManager, Auvik, Datadog) to your NOC and capacity planners. No threshold breach sitting in an inbox while SNMP polls. Your engineers get notified on their phones, ahead of the help desk queue.

[Start Standard Plan Trial →](https://my.textbolt.com/signup/)[Book a Demo](https://calendly.com/rp-spaceo/textbolt-demo-or-consultation-call-via-zoom)Up to 98%

Delivery Rate

 ~30 min

Setup Time

 Up to 10

Team Members (Multi-User Access)

  ★★★★★ **4.4** on Google Workspace Marketplace  <svg class="trust-bar-check" fill="none" height="16" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="16"><path d="M20 6L9 17l-5-5" stroke="#22c55e" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2.5"></path></svg> **10DLC** compliant routes  <svg class="trust-bar-check" fill="none" height="16" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="16"><path d="M20 6L9 17l-5-5" stroke="#22c55e" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2.5"></path></svg> **99.9%** uptime guarantee  <svg class="trust-bar-check" fill="none" height="16" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="16"><path d="M20 6L9 17l-5-5" stroke="#22c55e" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2.5"></path></svg> **Audit trails** on every message  Challenges

Your network monitoring tool detects saturation eventually. The problem is what happens between the SNMP poll and an engineer’s phone. Six SERP-verified failure modes drain real signal from real bandwidth alerts before a NOC operator, network engineer, or capacity planner can act.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><rect height="6" rx="1" width="20" x="2" y="9"></rect></svg>PingPlotter describes the experience: when a circuit saturates, “web pages take forever to load, movies buffer, VoIP calls get garbled and it feels like 2002 again.” Sonic Internet and Obkio both note saturation specifically degrades VoIP and cloud-based applications. Front-line workers feel it before the NOC sees a graph spike.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><polyline points="2 18 4 18 6 8 8 16 10 4 12 18 14 6 16 16 18 10 22 18"></polyline></svg>Statseeker docs frame the bind directly: “too low a threshold can result in alert flooding, while too high a threshold can result in anomalous activity going unreported.” Network engineers tune thresholds high to suppress noise from spiky interface utilization, then miss the real saturation events that matter.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><path d="M12 3a5 5 0 0 1 5 5v4l1.5 2h-13L7 12V8a5 5 0 0 1 5-5z"></path><path d="M10.5 18a1.5 1.5 0 0 0 3 0"></path></svg>A 2026 alert-fatigue study reports: 77% of on-call teams receive at least 10 alerts per day, only 30% of those alerts are actionable, 83% of engineers ignore or dismiss alerts at least occasionally, and 44% of organizations had an outage in the past year directly linked to suppressed or ignored alerts. Bandwidth alerts get filed in the dismiss-as-noise bucket.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><circle cx="9" cy="12" r="7"></circle><polyline points="9 8 9 12 12 13"></polyline></svg>Per LogicMonitor: critical devices need 30-second polling, but most networks poll every 5 minutes to avoid SNMP overhead. Datadog notes that “without SNMP traps, you’d have to wait for the manager to poll a device before finding out critical information.” By the time the bandwidth alert fires, saturation has already been running for several poll cycles.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><rect height="9" width="3" x="4" y="11"></rect><rect height="16" width="3" x="10" y="4"></rect><rect height="7" width="3" x="16" y="13"></rect></svg>Telcomanager and Cisco capacity planning guidance both recommend leaving 20-30% headroom so the network can absorb sudden spikes. Without it, circuits run flat at maximum sync rate for extended periods (a Sonic / Cisco community thread documents a 1.2 Mbps upload sync example). Backup windows, end-of-quarter reporting, and software-update storms run circuits past provisioned capacity.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><rect height="14" rx="1.5" width="20" x="2" y="3"></rect><circle cx="5" cy="5.5" fill="currentColor" r="0.5"></circle><circle cx="7.5" cy="5.5" fill="currentColor" r="0.5"></circle><polyline points="5 13 8 13 10 11 12 14 14 12 17 12"></polyline><path d="M19 14a2 2 0 1 0 0 4 2 2 0 0 0 0-4z" stroke-dasharray="1 1.5"></path></svg>PingPlotter documents the failure mode: “bandwidth consumers which are not so easily detected, including devices that share the same WiFi that all potentially could be downloading updates at the same time, as well as connected devices owned by other members.” Interface-level dashboards report 60% utilization while end users complain. The saturation is at a different layer the NOC isn’t watching.

Solution

TextBolt is an email-to-text gateway that sits between your network monitoring tool and engineers’ phones. Keep PRTG, SolarWinds NPM, OpManager, Auvik, Datadog, or ntopng for detection. Each bandwidth threshold email becomes text at up to 98% delivery from a 10DLC-compliant business number, with the full alert body preserved.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><polygon points="14 2 4 14 11 14 9 22 20 10 13 10 14 2"></polygon></svg>Bandwidth threshold breaches arrive as SMS within 10-30 seconds of the monitoring tool sending its email. NOC operators, on-call WAN engineers, and capacity planners read them on phones, not buried in an inbox they check the next morning. Lock-screen delivery means the response starts in seconds even when the engineer is off-shift, off the VPN, or asleep before a billing-cycle close.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><circle cx="12" cy="12" r="2.5"></circle><circle cx="4" cy="4" r="2"></circle><circle cx="20" cy="4" r="2"></circle><circle cx="4" cy="20" r="2"></circle><circle cx="20" cy="20" r="2"></circle></svg>PRTG, SolarWinds NPM and NetFlow Traffic Analyzer, ManageEngine OpManager + OpUtils + NetFlow Analyzer, Auvik, Datadog Network Monitoring, ntopng, Cacti, LibreNMS, Statseeker, Kentik, Plixer Scrutinizer, Obkio, Cisco DNA Center, Meraki Insight, plus Nagios check_bandwidth, Zabbix, Grafana, and Prometheus alerting. Any tool that emails bandwidth threshold alerts can deliver them as SMS through TextBolt.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><circle cx="4" cy="12" r="2"></circle><circle cx="20" cy="4" r="2"></circle><circle cx="20" cy="12" r="2"></circle><circle cx="20" cy="20" r="2"></circle></svg>One bandwidth alert can simultaneously notify the NOC operator on shift, the on-call WAN or SD-WAN engineer, the capacity planner watching 95th-percentile metering and burstable billing, and the SRE owning the affected app SLO. Multi-user access for up to 10 team members on Standard or Professional plans, no per-phone charge for added recipients.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><rect height="7" rx="1" width="16" x="4" y="3"></rect><rect height="7" rx="1" width="16" x="4" y="14"></rect></svg>The change is one field: your monitoring tool’s email recipient on the bandwidth threshold rule. Add `+15551234567@sendemailtotext.com` to PRTG, SolarWinds NPM, OpManager, Auvik, Datadog, or ntopng. No SDK, no API integration, no agent on the NOC server.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><rect height="17" rx="2" width="14" x="5" y="4"></rect><path d="M9 4V3a1 1 0 0 1 1-1h4a1 1 0 0 1 1 1v1"></path><polyline points="9 12 11 14 15 10"></polyline></svg>Every bandwidth SMS is timestamped and searchable: sender, recipient, delivery status, and the full alert body (interface name, utilization percentage, 95th-percentile context, source device, alert rule name) preserved as the monitoring tool wrote it. Useful for ISP escalations, MSP customer reporting, capacity planning reviews, and burstable billing dispute documentation.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><path d="M12 2l8 3v7c0 5-3.5 8.5-8 10-4.5-1.5-8-5-8-10V5z"></path><polyline points="8.5 12 11 14.5 15.5 9.5"></polyline></svg>TextBolt issues a registered business toll-free number per account. Bandwidth alerts deliver as legitimate business SMS, not flagged as spam like consumer-grade short codes or the shutdown [AT&T @txt.att.net gateway](https://textbolt.com/migration/att/), [T-Mobile @tmomail.net gateway](https://textbolt.com/migration/tmobile2/), and [Verizon @vtext.com gateway](https://textbolt.com/migration/verizon/) that many NOC SMS chains relied on for two decades.

Getting Started

End-to-end setup from account creation to a tested SMS alert is usually 30 minutes. No new monitoring tool, no agent rollout, no API code.

1

Create your account and add the NOC operators, network engineers, WAN leads, and capacity planners who should receive bandwidth alerts. Account creation is 2-3 minutes.

2

TextBolt issues a dedicated business toll-free number and a matching gateway address in the format `+15551234567@sendemailtotext.com`. Use the same address across every monitoring tool and bandwidth alert rule.

3

Verify your business so SMS sends from a 10DLC-compliant carrier-trusted business sender, not a flagged short code. The forms take 15-20 minutes to complete, after which carrier review and approval typically takes 24-48 hours before SMS sending is enabled.

4

In PRTG, SolarWinds NPM, ManageEngine OpManager, Auvik, Datadog Network Monitoring, ntopng, or Cacti, locate the email recipient field on your bandwidth threshold rule. Add `+15551234567@sendemailtotext.com` alongside (or replacing) any existing email destinations.

5

Lower the threshold temporarily on a test interface, generate traffic with iperf or a similar load tool, or use the monitoring tool’s “send test alert” button. Confirm the SMS arrives on the NOC team’s phones within 10-30 seconds with the full alert body intact.

6

Add `+1[phone]@sendemailtotext.com` recipients for the on-call WAN engineer, the SD-WAN lead, the capacity planner, the MSP escalation, or the SRE owning the affected app SLO. Most monitoring tools accept comma-separated lists or one row per recipient.

Process

## Three Ways to Send Bandwidth Alerts as SMS

<svg fill="none" height="26" stroke="#2b73db" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="26"><rect height="14" rx="2" ry="2" width="20" x="2" y="3"></rect><circle cx="12" cy="10" r="2"></circle></svg>

### Automated From Your Network Monitoring Tool (Most Common)

Your tool detects bandwidth saturation, interface utilization breach, link saturation, or 95th-percentile threshold trip. Examples: PRTG, SolarWinds NPM + NetFlow Traffic Analyzer, ManageEngine OpManager + NetFlow Analyzer, Auvik, Datadog Network Monitoring, ntopng, Cacti, LibreNMS, Statseeker, Kentik. Point the email recipient at +15551234567@sendemailtotext.com and every threshold breach becomes an SMS automatically.

  <svg fill="none" height="28" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="28"><path d="M5 12h14M12 5l7 7-7 7"></path></svg> <svg fill="none" height="26" stroke="#2b73db" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="26"><rect height="11" rx="1" width="16" x="2" y="5"></rect><polyline points="2 6 10 11 18 6"></polyline><path d="M14 14l3 3 1-2 2 1-1-2 3-1-8-3z"></path></svg>

### Manual Dispatch From Any Email Client

Smaller NOCs, after-hours pages, or capacity-planning hand-offs: any team member composes a bandwidth alert page from any email client (Gmail, Outlook, Apple Mail, Thunderbird, or others). Address to the recipient phone plus the gateway, for example +15551234567@sendemailtotext.com, and hit send. Useful for out-of-band escalations and circuit-upgrade-budget conversations.

  <svg fill="none" height="28" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="28"><path d="M5 12h14M12 5l7 7-7 7"></path></svg> <svg fill="none" height="26" stroke="#2b73db" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="26"><rect height="11" rx="1" width="14" x="2" y="5"></rect><polyline points="2 6 9 11 16 6"></polyline><path d="M13 19h8"></path><polyline points="18 15 22 19 18 23"></polyline></svg>

### Email Forwarding (Locked-Down Vendor Appliances)

If your monitoring tool or vendor appliance has a hard-coded SMTP destination, set up a forwarding rule on the receiving inbox (Office 365, Google Workspace, your NOC MTA). Alerts land in the inbox, auto-forward to the TextBolt gateway, and convert to SMS without touching the appliance configuration.

 Use Cases

From distributed-office IT departments running Zoom and Teams across a dozen locations to fintech ops teams watching burstable billing risk on bursty MPLS circuits, TextBolt delivers bandwidth alerts to the engineers and planners who can act. Flat pricing, multi-recipient fan-out, audit trail per alert.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><path d="M18 9h-1.26A8 8 0 1 0 9 19h9a5 5 0 0 0 0-10z"></path><polygon points="10 11 15 14 10 17"></polygon></svg>SaaS products that ship over WebRTC, embedded video, real-time chat, or live streaming get bandwidth saturation SMS the instant a peering link or last-mile path begins to choke. SREs reach the network path before customer support tickets arrive.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><rect height="8" rx="1" width="12" x="6" y="8"></rect><circle cx="3" cy="5" r="1.5"></circle><circle cx="12" cy="3" r="1.5"></circle><circle cx="21" cy="5" r="1.5"></circle></svg>MSPs running PRTG, SolarWinds NPM, OpManager, Auvik, or Datadog across dozens of client networks route every client’s bandwidth alert through one TextBolt gateway. SMS arrives at the MSP NOC; replies land in a shared inbox so multi-tier handoffs preserve client context across billing accounts.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><rect height="8" rx="0.5" width="6" x="2" y="13"></rect><rect height="12" rx="0.5" width="6" x="9" y="9"></rect><rect height="8" rx="0.5" width="6" x="16" y="13"></rect><circle cx="5" cy="5" r="1.5"></circle><circle cx="12" cy="5" r="1.5"></circle><circle cx="19" cy="5" r="1.5"></circle></svg>Multi-site organizations heavy on Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Webex, and SaaS catch circuit saturation before front-line workers complain. Per-site bandwidth thresholds in PRTG or SolarWinds NPM page IT immediately on the affected branch.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><circle cx="12" cy="12" r="9"></circle><path d="M12 3a14 14 0 0 1 0 18"></path><path d="M12 3a14 14 0 0 0 0 18"></path><circle cx="6" cy="8" fill="currentColor" r="1"></circle><circle cx="18" cy="8" fill="currentColor" r="1"></circle><circle cx="6" cy="16" fill="currentColor" r="1"></circle><circle cx="18" cy="16" fill="currentColor" r="1"></circle></svg>WAN and SD-WAN engineers managing MPLS, broadband, and SD-WAN underlay tunnels get SMS the instant a tunnel saturates or a circuit hits 95th-percentile billing thresholds. ThousandEyes, Datadog Network Monitoring, and SD-WAN-vendor dashboards all email; TextBolt makes them SMS.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><path d="M5 8a8 8 0 0 1 14 0"></path><path d="M8 10a5 5 0 0 1 8 0"></path><circle cx="12" cy="12" r="1.5"></circle></svg>ISP NOC and carrier ops teams watching peering saturation, transit fill rate, and core-link utilization route SMS to on-call network engineers across regions. Carrier-trusted 10DLC sender, full alert body with interface and utilization metric values intact.

<svg fill="none" height="22" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="22"><rect height="7" width="3" x="4" y="13"></rect><rect height="11" width="3" x="10" y="9"></rect><rect height="15" width="3" x="16" y="5"></rect><circle cx="20" cy="6" r="2.5"></circle></svg>Burstable billing, 95th-percentile metering, and circuit overrun on bursty MPLS or transit circuits create real cost surprises. TextBolt routes SMS to the capacity planner watching the circuit budget, so a runaway bandwidth event triggers an upgrade conversation before the next invoice cycle.

Comparison

TextBolt is not a network monitoring tool and is not a full on-call platform. It sits between the two and handles reliable SMS delivery for bandwidth alerts, replacing per-tool SMS gateways and shutdown carrier gateways.

Per-tool gateway maintenance

PRTG SMS plugin, SolarWinds SMS gateway, OpManager SMS, Auvik SMS, custom carrier email-to-SMS forwards. Each tool needs its own SMS path.

- <svg class="flex-shrink-0 mt-0.5 text-muted-foreground" fill="none" height="18" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="18"><circle cx="12" cy="12" r="10"></circle></svg>Every tool maintains its own SMS gateway
- <svg class="flex-shrink-0 mt-0.5 text-muted-foreground" fill="none" height="18" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="18"><circle cx="12" cy="12" r="10"></circle></svg>Often relies on shut-down @txt.att.net / @tmomail.net
- <svg class="flex-shrink-0 mt-0.5 text-muted-foreground" fill="none" height="18" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="18"><circle cx="12" cy="12" r="10"></circle></svg>Often relies on shut-down @txt.att.net / @tmomail.net
- <svg class="flex-shrink-0 mt-0.5 text-muted-foreground" fill="none" height="18" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="18"><circle cx="12" cy="12" r="10"></circle></svg>No unified audit trail across tools

Recommended

$49/month (Standard plan)

Email-to-SMS gateway. One address handles every network monitoring tool’s bandwidth email and turns it into SMS with multi-engineer fan-out.


[Start Standard Plan Trial →](https://my.textbolt.com/signup/)$21-79 per user per month

Full on-call platform with rotation scheduling, escalation ladders, and incident management workflows.

- <svg class="flex-shrink-0 mt-0.5 text-destructive" fill="none" height="18" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="18"><circle cx="12" cy="12" r="10"></circle></svg> Per-seat pricing
- <svg class="flex-shrink-0 mt-0.5 text-destructive" fill="none" height="18" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="18"><circle cx="12" cy="12" r="10"></circle></svg> Platform to learn and integrate
- <svg class="flex-shrink-0 mt-0.5 text-destructive" fill="none" height="18" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="18"><circle cx="12" cy="12" r="10"></circle></svg> Full on-call product scope
- <svg class="flex-shrink-0 mt-0.5 text-destructive" fill="none" height="18" stroke="currentColor" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" stroke-width="2" viewbox="0 0 24 24" width="18"><circle cx="12" cy="12" r="10"></circle></svg>Often overkill if you only need SMS for bandwidth alerts

Benefits

Reliable SMS delivery, multi-engineer fan-out, and pricing that doesn’t scale per-seat with your NOC.

Delivery Rate

End-to-End Setup

Basic Plan Starting Price

10-30 sec

Alert Arrival Time

## Frequently Asked Questions

Got questions? We’ve got answers.

** Does TextBolt work with my network monitoring tool (PRTG, SolarWinds NPM, OpManager, Auvik, Datadog, ntopng)?**

Yes. TextBolt does not integrate with the monitoring tool. The tool only needs to email when a bandwidth threshold trips, which PRTG, SolarWinds NPM, OpManager, Auvik, Datadog Network Monitoring, ntopng, LibreNMS, Statseeker, Nagios, Zabbix, and every other modern monitoring tool can do. If your tool emails on threshold breach, TextBolt can SMS it.

**How is TextBolt different from network monitoring tools or PagerDuty?**

TextBolt is not a monitoring tool, not a full on-call platform like PagerDuty, and not an SMS API like Twilio. Keep your existing detection tool. TextBolt adds SMS delivery on top: your tool’s email alert goes to a TextBolt gateway address and lands as SMS at up to 98% delivery from a 10DLC-compliant business number.

**Will TextBolt detect bandwidth saturation for me?**

No. TextBolt is a delivery layer, not a detection tool. Bandwidth detection stays in your monitoring tool (PRTG, SolarWinds NPM, OpManager, Auvik, Datadog, ntopng). TextBolt SMSes that tool’s email alert so NOC operators, network engineers, and capacity planners are reached in seconds, not on the next inbox check.

**How fast does the bandwidth SMS arrive after a threshold breach?**

Typically 10-30 seconds after your tool sends the email. The SNMP polling interval is a separate variable in front of that; if devices poll every 5 minutes, that delay sits ahead of TextBolt’s 10-30 second contribution.

**Does this help with the SNMP polling delay problem?**

TextBolt cuts the inbox-to-engineer delay, not the SNMP polling interval. For end-to-end speed, configure SNMP traps on critical devices (push-based, no polling) or shorten polling intervals per LogicMonitor’s 30-second guidance for core devices. Once the email fires, TextBolt delivers it as SMS in seconds.

**Can multiple engineers receive the same bandwidth alert?**

Yes. One alert fans out in parallel to the NOC operator on shift, the on-call WAN or SD-WAN engineer, the capacity planner, the MSP escalation, and the SRE owning the SLO.

**How does this help with 95th-percentile metering, capacity planning, or burstable billing?**

Configure your monitoring tool to alert when an interface approaches its 95th-percentile threshold (the metering basis for most burstable billing contracts). Route those alerts through TextBolt to the capacity planner who owns the circuit budget. SMS arrives in seconds, so the upgrade conversation starts before the next invoice cycle.

**Will TextBolt help with bandwidth alert fatigue or false positives?**

No. TextBolt improves delivery of whatever your tool fires. Tight thresholds or spiky utilization just become noisy SMS. Per Statseeker’s guidance, tune sustained-data-range thresholds first. Once tuning is right, TextBolt makes sure the tuned alerts that fire reach engineers in seconds.

**What if my carrier email-to-SMS gateway (txt.att.net, tmomail.net, vtext.com) is still configured?**

It is silently failing. T-Mobile’s @tmomail.net shut down in late 2024, AT&T’s @txt.att.net shut down on June 17, 2025, and Verizon’s @vtext.com is phasing down through March 2027. Replace the carrier-gateway recipient on your bandwidth alert rule with `+15551234567@sendemailtotext.com`. Same phone, different domain, registered carrier-trusted business sender.

**Does the SMS include the interface, threshold, and circuit context from the alert?**

Yes. The SMS carries the full alert body (interface name, current utilization, threshold breached, 95th-percentile context, source device, rule name, incident link). Long bodies segment across multiple SMS so nothing truncates, and NOC operators can start review from the SMS itself.

**How is this different from the packet-loss-alerts use case?**

Packet loss alerts cover network quality and drop events (VoIP, video, TCP retransmission slowdown). Bandwidth alerts cover saturation and capacity events (circuit overrun, burstable billing surprises, capacity escalations). Same audience and gateway, different alert patterns. Most teams route both through the same TextBolt account.

Reach Network Engineers Before the Help Desk Queue Fills

Start delivering bandwidth SMS alerts from your existing network monitoring tool to your NOC’s phones in about 30 minutes. One gateway, every tool, multi-engineer fan-out.[](#)

[Start Trial Now →](https://my.textbolt.com/signup/)


---

_View the original post at: [https://textbolt.com/use-case/bandwidth-monitoring-text-alerts/](https://textbolt.com/use-case/bandwidth-monitoring-text-alerts/)_  
_Served as markdown by [Third Audience](https://github.com/third-audience) v3.5.5_  
_Generated: 2026-06-08 12:37:15 UTC_  
