The 411 on area codes: How new tech and population growth fuels the need for more digits
Published in Slideshow World
212. 213. 312. If you know, you know.
Over nearly 80 years, area codes have come to signify regional identities and a deep connection to a place. So what happens when tech and population growth collide, and the three-digit number synonymous with home is no longer available?
Spokeo analyzed the proliferation of area codes and how they are assigned to people using information from the North American Numbering Plan Administrator, illustrating how some regions might be undergoing a change in which codes are the coolest.
Area codes have taken on a life of their own. Consider the 212 area code in Manhattan, for instance. New Yorkers have bestowed it with a certain status; there's even a phone brokerage company that sells 212 numbers. When new area codes were introduced in Manhattan, some residents weren't pleased—including Elaine Benes on "Seinfeld," who spent the whole Season 9 episode "The Maid" trying to get her coveted 212 area code back after being assigned a new 646 number.
Yes, even pop culture acknowledges the prestige of 212, but area codes didn't start as status symbols. In the 1940s, when phone operators connected calls, the Bell Telephone Company created a new system allowing people to make direct calls to whomever they wanted—no operators involved. As phone numbers outnumbered the human operators who could connect calls, the change was a natural evolution.
Enter the area code. These three-digit numbers became part of the North American Numbering Plan. Eighty-six distinct Numbering Plan Areas were created, with most states getting one area code by 1947; high-population states had more. The Bell System used a distinctive structure based on population size rather than geography to assign area codes.
States with more than one area code were given the number "1" as a second digit, while those with only one were given the number "0" as a second digit. Because rotary telephones require longer rotations to enter "0" and other small numbers, the digits mattered. The most populated regions, such as California, were assigned the area codes that were the least cumbersome to dial.
Over time, population growth and an increase in telephone devices created overlay codes. When the original code numbers are exhausted, these secondary area codes are assigned to serve the same geographic region as another existing area code, which brings us back to 212.
"You feel like it's New York, as trivial as that sounds. It's sort of an icon of New York to have the 212 area code, like Broadway or yellow cabs," Nan Kim, then a graduate student at Columbia University, told The New York Times in 1999.
But there wasn't much a new New Yorker could do. After 45 years, the 212 numbers were close to being exhausted. In 1992, 917 hit the town, specifically for cellphones and pagers; the 646 area code was introduced in 1999, and in 2017, Manhattan received a new 332 area code. Now there are at least seven area codes in the area (one original, six overlay).
Many regions have followed similar patterns. In March 2024, a new 436 area code was designated for Ohio alongside the existing 440 code. This August, Minnesota will welcome a new 924 area code alongside the existing 507 code. Although overlay area codes fill the need for more phone numbers, users may still feel a void: losing regional identity.
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