Polycom VVX 450 Business IP Phone (Power Supply Not Included) (Renewed)

3.3 3.3 out of 5 stars | 13 ratings

Price: 57.5

Last update: 01-09-2025


About this item

Polycom® VVX® 450 Business IP Phone

Twelve-line, performance IP desk phone with color display

The Polycom® VVX® 450 business IP desk phone is a high

Product information


Top reviews from the United States

Pinto Distributor LLC
5.0 out of 5 stars great product
Reviewed in the United States on July 1, 2024
nice product well done thanks.
Shane
1.0 out of 5 stars Phone was not reset - no password to link to account.
Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2023
Just buy the phone new from manufacturer. Pay the extra money.

The seller's response to our inquiry (phone was not able to be setup with phone.com) "the phone is not not defective." Nothing more. This company is trash. Buy your phone from somewhere else.
Daniel Weissman
3.0 out of 5 stars Phone works, wrong hedset cable and not factor reset
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2024
The handset cable was just a generic one that didn't fit the wire guide properly, and the phone had to be factor reset, which was extra annoying.

These aren't exactly refurbished, they are just cleaned off and repackaged.
for $50 its a fine deal
ToothDoctor
5.0 out of 5 stars Works with Google Voice
Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2023
After trying and failing to use several x350's. I purchased the 450 non-obi. You can log-in to the web gui (use https://192.168.X.X --your phone's IP, but must be https unless you enable http in settings of phone) and flash the OBI version (google polyUC SOFTWARE TO OBI EDITION SOFTWARE). Wait for it to restart literally 15-20x. Add to google voice and it'll restart several times more. Works great, ordered two
Wayne Chen
4.0 out of 5 stars Not easy to setup the way you want.
Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2023
Wanted to save real money on business PBX and went with a single grandstream ucm6301 pbx and 12 gxp2160 phones connecting to two locations. Converted from a 90s Nortel analog PBX. Spent $1000 in hardware and lots of hours tinkering. But dropped our phone bill from 250 a month to $50 a month (most of that goes to a web HIPAA compliant unlimited fax service. Voice was $15-20). Anyways back to poly. Some of the Gxp2160 is laggy on picking up sometimes. So forum users mentioned, this does not happen with other phones. So decided to try it out. Looked for phones based on cost and still supported by company. Ended up on vvx450 because they are decent company and used cheap. Looked for yealinks but lots of their low cost high quality phones are end of life. So got this. I was sent the UC version and man the UI was complicated. Definitely not for diy. Config files uhh what's that? Seems built for enterprise level telephony with pro certified to work with it. Couldn't find any setup videos. It was unlike the grandstream with intuitive UI and lots of videos and forum support. I was thinking about giving up. But a few videos on the poly had obi version and that looked easier to work with. I used obi200 before and thought setting up through obitalk might be easier. Conversion process was simple and available on poly website. Obitalk registered but could not setup anything. Just great. Luckily the UI on the obi version did not involve config files of the UC version. Used concepts learned from the grandstream setup and obi version admin guide to setup up the way I wanted for our office. Lots of Ctrl f to find info I needed from the admin guide. Took allot going through different configuration sections in webui to add function and change the function description and LED. Still testing but so far it works well. Pickup relatively quick and audio seems good. Takes up little less real estate than gxp 2160. It's a good phone but not much diy support. Some fancy features that I have no clue about only available on Broadsoft PBX (dunno what that is but I doubt it's cheap). Not easy. I got my configuration now and so I'll be loading that on the other phone I got. Would I buy it again? Maybe if the other gxp2160s starts to get laggy on pickup.
Customer image
Wayne Chen
4.0 out of 5 stars Not easy to setup the way you want.
Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2023
Wanted to save real money on business PBX and went with a single grandstream ucm6301 pbx and 12 gxp2160 phones connecting to two locations. Converted from a 90s Nortel analog PBX. Spent $1000 in hardware and lots of hours tinkering. But dropped our phone bill from 250 a month to $50 a month (most of that goes to a web HIPAA compliant unlimited fax service. Voice was $15-20). Anyways back to poly. Some of the Gxp2160 is laggy on picking up sometimes. So forum users mentioned, this does not happen with other phones. So decided to try it out. Looked for phones based on cost and still supported by company. Ended up on vvx450 because they are decent company and used cheap. Looked for yealinks but lots of their low cost high quality phones are end of life. So got this. I was sent the UC version and man the UI was complicated. Definitely not for diy. Config files uhh what's that? Seems built for enterprise level telephony with pro certified to work with it. Couldn't find any setup videos. It was unlike the grandstream with intuitive UI and lots of videos and forum support. I was thinking about giving up. But a few videos on the poly had obi version and that looked easier to work with. I used obi200 before and thought setting up through obitalk might be easier. Conversion process was simple and available on poly website. Obitalk registered but could not setup anything. Just great. Luckily the UI on the obi version did not involve config files of the UC version. Used concepts learned from the grandstream setup and obi version admin guide to setup up the way I wanted for our office. Lots of Ctrl f to find info I needed from the admin guide. Took allot going through different configuration sections in webui to add function and change the function description and LED. Still testing but so far it works well. Pickup relatively quick and audio seems good. Takes up little less real estate than gxp 2160. It's a good phone but not much diy support. Some fancy features that I have no clue about only available on Broadsoft PBX (dunno what that is but I doubt it's cheap). Not easy. I got my configuration now and so I'll be loading that on the other phone I got. Would I buy it again? Maybe if the other gxp2160s starts to get laggy on pickup.
Images in this review
Customer image

Best Sellers in

 
 

HP Laserjet Pro M28w Multi-Function Wireless Monochrome Printer, Copy & Scan with Smart App, W2G55A (Renewed)

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 324
169.99
 
 

Yealink SIP-T46G Ultra-Elegant Gigabit IP Phone (Renewed)

3.7 3.7 out of 5 stars 34
59
 
 

Brother FAX-575 Personal Fax, Phone, and Copier (Renewed)

4 4 out of 5 stars 118
195
 
 

Allworx Verge 9312 IP Phone Gigabit Bluetooth (Renewed)

3.3 3.3 out of 5 stars 2
137
 
 

Panasonic KX-TGD563A Link2Cell Bluetooth Cordless Phone with Voice Assist and Answering Machine - 3 Handsets (Renewed)

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 219
59.99
 
 

Polycom VVX 410 12-Line Desktop Phone (Power Supply Included) (Renewed)

4 4 out of 5 stars 97
49
 
 

Samsung IDCS 28 button Display Phone (Renewed)

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 16
37.94
 
 

Yealink T54W IP Phone, 16 VoIP Accounts. 4.3-Inch Color Display, AC Wi-Fi, Dual-Port Gigabit Ethernet, PoE, Power Adapter Not

3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars 87
87