Deep Dive into North American Numbering Plan - VoIP.ms Wiki

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Deep Dive into North American Numbering Plan

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Deep Dive into North American Numbering Plan

In response to a requirement of a standardized numbering plan for Direct Distance Dialing (DDD), engineers at AT&T and Bell Laboratories developed the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) in 1947. This development of the North American Numbering Plan allowed people to make long-distance calls without any operator assistance.

Initially, the NANP was developed for 86 geographic areas, each with its unique three-digit NPA (Numbering Plan Area Code). However, the NANP allowed for expansion to 144 areas and eight N00 Service Access Codes, and eight N11 codes. But with the advancement of switching technology, when the initial 144 NPA was exhausted in 1995, the North American Numbering Plan was expanded to 792 codes.


North American Numbering Plan


The North American Numbering Plan (NANP) divides the telephone service territories into Numbering Plan Area (NPA), as discussed earlier, and assigns a three-digit area code to each. This three-digit code becomes the first part of the phone number. The other numbers consist of a three-digit prefix or central office code (indicating a specific exchange or rate center) and a four-digit station number.

This combination of the area code, prefix, and station number provides the destination routing address in the PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Number). This format is usually represented as NPA-NXX-XXXX. Here the NPA is the Numbering Plan Area, NXX is the Central Office Code and the XXXX is the Station Number.

Having said that, each area code has approximately 800 Central Office Codes. However, some of them like 911 are unavailable as they are dedicated to public use. Each central office code 10,000 phone numbers, whereas every area code has almost eight million phone numbers. You might think of it as a large number. But some big cities go through them very quickly due to the growing population and increasing cellular demand among other reasons. Having said that, once the numbers get exhausted new ones must be issued through a process known as area code relief.


Difference between North Numbering Plan and Formatting Elsewhere


1. Fixed Length Number Plan Area Codes

There is a certain difference between the numbering plan when it comes to the North American Numbering Plan and formatting elsewhere. For instance, the Number Plan Area codes of NANP have a fixed three-digit length. However, the Australian telephone number plan has Number Plan Area codes of a single digit.


2. Variable Length Number Plan Area Codes

While the formatting of the NPA codes in the North America Numbering Plan and that of the Australia Numbering Plan is different, they have a fixed length. But some countries have variable length NPA codes as compared to fixed-length NPA codes of NANP. For instance, the UK and Germany both have variable length codes ranging from two to five digits, and Japan where NPA codes range from one to five digits.


You want to know how to correct dial? Read VoIP.ms wiki entry (https://wiki.voip.ms/article/Dialing_Codes) or contact [email protected].


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