List of North American Numbering Plan area codes

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Code Territory or use Date Notes 800 toll-free telephone service 1966
  • created in 1966
  • see also 822, 833, 844, 855, 866, 877, 880–887, 888, and 889
801 Utah (Counties of Davis, Morgan, Salt Lake, Utah, and Weber along the Wasatch Front, including the cities of Salt Lake City, Ogden, and Provo) 1947
  • originally covered all of Utah
  • in 1997, split to create 435
  • in 2009, overlaid by 385
802 Vermont (all) 1947 803 South Carolina (Columbia, Rock Hill, Sumter, Aiken, and most of central South Carolina) 1947
  • originally covered all of South Carolina
  • in 1995, split to create 864
  • in 1998, split twice to create 843
  • in 2020, overlaid by 839
804 Virginia (the Richmond Metropolitan Area, including Petersburg and the Northern Neck and Middle Peninsula) June 24, 1973
  • in 1973, created by a split from 703
  • in 1996, split to create 757
  • in 2001, split to create 434
  • in 2024, to be overlaid by 686
805 California (Ventura, San Luis Obispo, and Santa Barbara Counties) 1957
  • in 1957, created by a split from 213
  • in 1999, split to create 661
  • in 2018, overlaid by 820
806 Texas (Lubbock, Amarillo, Canadian, Canyon, Dalhart, and the entire Texas Panhandle) 1957
  • in 1957, created from parts of 817 and 915
807 Ontario (Northwestern Ontario: Thunder Bay, Kenora, Dryden, Greenstone) 1962
  • in 1962, created by a split from 705
808 Hawaii (all of the Hawaiian Islands to Midway Atoll and major Hawaiian cities including Honolulu, Kailua, Mililani, Haleiwa, Hilo, Kahului, Lihue, etc.; plus Wake Island) 1957 809 Dominican Republic 1958
  • originally assigned in 1958 to Bermuda and most Caribbean islands
  • in 1995, split to create 441
  • in 1996, split to create 787, 268, 246, 664, 758, 345, 242, and 869
  • in 1997, split to create 264, 876, 340, 649, 868, 284, 767, and 473
  • in 1998, split to create 784
  • by 2000, served the Dominican Republic exclusively
  • in 2005, overlaid by 829
  • in 2009, overlaid by 849
810 Michigan (Port Huron, Flint, Lapeer, and the Michigan “Thumb”) December 1, 1993
  • until 1981, used by AT&T for its TWX (Telex) service (along with 510, 610, 710, and 910)
  • in 1993, created by a split from 313
  • in 1997, split to create 248
  • in 2001, split to create 586
811 an N11 short code used as a regional information number, with usage varying by country; not assignable as an area code
  • in the USA, the FCC adopted it as the local underground utility assistance service in 2007
  • in Canada, the CRTC reserved it for non-urgent telehealth services in 2005, though not all provinces and territories have yet adopted it
  • formerly used for mobile customer service on some carriers (now 6-1-1)
  • formerly used for some local emergency numbers in Jamaica (now 9-1-1)
812 Indiana (Southern Indiana, including Bloomington, Evansville, Terre Haute, Columbus, Jeffersonville, Lawrenceburg, Madison, and New Albany) 1947 813 Florida (all of Hillsborough County, including Tampa and its suburbs, MacDill Air Force Base, and Plant City; and the inland areas of Pasco County and Oldsmar in Pinellas County[12]) 1953
  • in 1953, created by a split from 305 to give Florida more than one area code
  • in 1995, split to create 941
  • in 1998, split to create 727
  • in 2022, overlaid by 656[13]
814 Pennsylvania (Erie, State College, Altoona, Clearfield, Emporium, Johnsonburg, Johnstown, Meyersdale, Ridgway, Somerset, and most of northwestern and parts of central Pennsylvania) 1947 815 Illinois (much of northern Illinois outside Chicago and its immediate surrounding suburbs: Rockford and its suburbs, Belvidere, La Salle, Peru, DeKalb, Sycamore, Freeport, Dixon, Sterling, Rock Falls, Ottawa, Morris, Princeton, Mendota, Rochelle, Sandwich, Streator, Pontiac, Kankakee, and some outlying Chicago suburbs such as Harvard, McHenry, Crystal Lake, Woodstock, Plainfield, Joliet, Romeoville, Lockport, New Lenox, Frankfort, Minooka, Channahon, and Shorewood) 1947
  • in 1957, split to create a part of 309
  • in 2007, overlaid by 779
816 Missouri (Kansas City, St Joseph, Independence, Harrisonville, and parts of west-central Missouri) 1947
  • in 1950, split to create a part of 417
  • in 1997, split to create 660
  • in 2023, to be overlaid by 975
817 Texas (Fort Worth, Arlington, Grand Prairie, Grandview, Weatherford) 1953
  • in 1953, created from parts of 214 and 915
  • in 1957, split to create a part of 806
  • in 1997, split to created 254 and 940
  • in 2000, overlaid by 682
818 California (the San Fernando Valley portion of Los Angeles County, including Burbank, Canoga Park, Encino, Glendale, North Hollywood, Northridge, Panorama City, Reseda, San Fernando, Sylmar, Tarzana, Van Nuys, and Woodland Hills) January 7, 1984
  • in 1984, created by a split from 213
  • in 1997, split to create 626
  • in 2009, overlaid by 747
819 Quebec (Western Québec, except Montréal 514 and surrounding area 450: a large area including Abitibi-Témiscamingue, Estrie, Mauricie, Outaouais, Sherbrooke, and Trois-Rivieres) 1957 820 California (Ventura, San Luis Obispo, and Santa Barbara Counties) June 30, 2018 821 South Carolina (The Upstate, including Greenville, Spartanburg, Anderson, Clemson, and most of northwestern South Carolina) August 19, 2024
  • in 2024, to be overlaid on 864
822 not in use; available for toll-free assignment 823–824 not in use; available for geographic assignment 825 Alberta (all) April 9, 2016 826 Virginia (Fredericksburg, Roanoke, Blacksburg, Harrisonburg, Lexington, Staunton, Winchester, and parts of north-central Virginia) June 14, 2022 827 not in use; available for geographic assignment 828 North Carolina (Asheville, Franklin, Hickory, Murphy, Waynesville, and parts of western North Carolina) March 22, 1998
  • in 1998, created by a split from 704
829 Dominican Republic August 1, 2005 830 Texas (Del Rio, Kerrville, Eagle Pass, Fredericksburg, New Braunfels, and a part of the Rio Grande Valley) July 7, 1997
  • in 1997, created by a split from 210
831 California (Monterey County, including Salinas and Monterey); San Benito County (including Hollister); and Santa Cruz County (including Santa Cruz and Watsonville) July 11, 1998
  • in 1998, created by a split from 408
832 Texas (Houston Metropolitan Area and suburbs) January 16, 1999
  • in 1999, overlaid on 713 and 281
  • in 2014, overlaid by 346
833 toll-free telephone service June 3, 2017 834 not in use; available for geographic assignment 835 Pennsylvania (Chester, Lehigh Valley, Norristown, Reading; parts of southeastern Pennsylvania) September 2, 2022 836–837 not in use; available for geographic assignment 838 New York (Albany, Schenectady, Plattsburgh, Saranac Lake, Lake George, Westport, and most of northeastern New York) September 19, 2017 839 South Carolina May 26, 2020 840 California (southwestern San Bernardino County and a small portion of Los Angeles and Riverside counties, including Fontana, Pomona, Chino Hills, Claremont, Chino, Ontario, and Redlands) February 23, 2021 841–842 not in use; available for geographic assignment 843 South Carolina (Charleston, Florence, Hilton Head Island, Myrtle Beach, Charleston Air Force Base, and most of southeastern South Carolina) March 22, 1998
  • in 1998, created by a split from 803
  • in 2015, overlaid by 854
  • mnemonic: TIDes for being along the South Carolina Coast
844 toll-free telephone service December 7, 2013 845 New York (Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Sullivan, and Ulster counties) June 5, 2000
  • in 2000, created by splitting from 914
  • in 2023, overlaid with 329
846 not in use; available for geographic assignment 847 Illinois (North and northwest suburbs of Chicago, including Lake, northern Cook, northern Kane, and extreme southeastern McHenry Counties; includes Evanston, Skokie, Niles, Park Ridge, Des Plaines, Mount Prospect, Arlington Heights, Palatine, Wheeling, Buffalo Grove, Barrington, Elk Grove Village, Schaumburg, Hoffman Estates, Elgin, Carpentersville, Algonquin, Lake in the Hills, Huntley, Hampshire, Cary, Lake Zurich, Fox Lake, Round Lake Beach, Antioch, Gurnee, Waukegan, Zion, Lake Forest, Vernon Hills, Libertyville, Mundelein, Northbrook, Glenview, Deerfield, Highland Park, Wilmette, Winnetka) January 20, 1996
  • in 1996, created by a split from 708
  • in 1998, overlaid by 224
848 New Jersey (New Brunswick, Lakewood, Neptune, Fort Dix, and most of east-central New Jersey) December 29, 2001 849 Dominican Republic July 1, 2009
  • in 2009, overlaid on 809 and 829
850 northwestern Florida (Appalachicola, Pensacola, Tallahassee, Quincy, Panama City, Naval Air Station Pensacola, Eglin Air Force Baseand all of the Florida Panhandle) June 23, 1997
  • in 1997, created by a split from 904
  • in 2021, overlaid by 448
851 not in use; available for geographic assignment in Canada 852–853 not in use; available for geographic assignment 854 South Carolina (Charleston, Florence, Hilton Head Island, Myrtle Beach, Charleston Air Force Base, and most of southeastern South Carolina) October 19, 2015 855 toll-free telephone service October 9, 2010
  • in 2010, created as a further expansion of 800
856 New Jersey (Cherry Hill, Camden, Millville, Vineland, and most of southwestern New Jersey) June 12, 1999
  • in 1999, created by a split from 609
857 Massachusetts (Belmont, Brookline, Chelsea, Everett, Milton, Quincy, Watertown, Winthrop, and close-in Boston suburbs) May 2, 2001 858 California (San Diego and suburbs) June 12, 1999
  • in 1999, created by a split from 619
  • in 2017, merged with 619 as an overlay
859 Kentucky (Lexington, Richmond, Danville, Covington, Florence, and northernmost Kentucky) April 1, 2000 860 Connecticut (Hartford, Bristol, Norwich, and northern and eastern Connecticut) August 28, 1995
  • in 1995, created by a split from 203
  • in 2014, overlaid by 959
861 Illinois (Peoria, Bloomington, Moline, Rock Island, Galesburg; west-central Illinois) February 24, 2023
  • in 2023, to be overlaid on 309
862 New Jersey December 29, 2001 863 Florida (Lakeland, Bartow, Sebring, Winter Haven in south central Florida) September 20, 1999
  • in 1999, created by a split from 941
864 South Carolina (The Upstate, including Greenville, Spartanburg, Anderson, Clemson, and most of northwestern South Carolina) December 3, 1995 865 Tennessee (Knoxville, Alcoa, Athens, Clinton, Crossville, Dayton, Gatlinburg, Loudon, Maryville, Newport, Oak Ridge, Oliver Springs, Pigeon Forge, Rockwood, Sweetwater, etc., in east Tennessee) November 1, 1999 866 toll-free telephone service July 29, 2000
  • in 2000, created as a further expansion of 800
867 the Canadian Territories: Yukon, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut October 21, 1997
  • in 1997, created from parts of 403 and 819
  • mnemonic: TOP of the world
  • mnemonic: 1867 was the year of Canada’s confederation (formation; long-distance calls to the 867 area code must begin 1-867)
868 Trinidad and Tobago (all) June 1, 1997 869 Saint Kitts and Nevis (all) October 1, 1996
  • in 1996, created by a split from 809
870 Arkansas (Texarkana, Jonesboro, Pine Bluff, and southern, eastern, and northeastern Arkansas) April 14, 1997
  • in 1997, created by a split from 501
  • in 2024, to be overlaid by 327
871 not in use; available for geographic assignment in Canada 872 Illinois November 7, 2009 873 Quebec (Western Québec, except Montréal 514 and surrounding area 450: a large area including Abitibi-Témiscamingue, Estrie, Mauricie, Outaouais, Sherbrooke, and Trois-Rivières) September 15, 2012
  • in 2012, overlaid on 819
  • in 2022, overlaid by 468
874–875 not in use; available for geographic assignment 876 Jamaica May 1, 1997
  • in 1997, created by a split from 809
  • in 2018, overlaid by 658
877 toll-free telephone service April 4, 1998 878 Pennsylvania August 17, 2001 879 Newfoundland (all)
  • was to overlay 709 24 November 2018; however, on 5 September 2017, its implementation was suspended when the exhaust date was recalculated for March 2024; its implementation date was planned for 20 May 2022, but its implementation was suspended when the exhaust date was recalculated for June 2028
880–887 not in use; available for toll-free assignment
  • Codes 880 through 882 were used (until 1 April 2004) to allow international customers to access toll-free numbers they otherwise could not by paying the international portion of the toll. 880 was paired with 800, 881 with 888, and 882 with 877.[21]
888 toll-free telephone service March 1, 1996 889 not in use; available for toll-free assignment 890–899 not in use; reserved for potential North American Numbering Plan expansion
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