UK telephone numbering plan
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The UK telephone numbering plan, also known as the National Numbering Plan, is regulated by the Office of Communications (Ofcom), which replaced the Office of Telecommunications (Oftel) in 2003.
Contents |
Format
Following the changes in 1995, 2000 and 2001, the numbering range in use is as follows. Note that the initial '0' of a telephone number (called the trunk prefix) is not properly considered part of the area code, and thus (for example) 023 is a "two-digit" area code, the "0" prefixes national numbers and "00" international numbers.
Geographic numbering
- (01xxxx) xxxxx - a five digit area code and 5 digit subscriber number e.g.
015396 | Sedbergh |
---|
- (01xxx) xxx xxx — a four digit area code and six digit subscriber number. The break is placed in the middle by convention but this does not reflect normal allocation blocks. e.g:
01382 | Dundee | 38 = DU |
---|---|---|
01482 | Hull | 48 = HU |
01582 | Luton | 58 = LU |
- 01x1-xxx xxxx — the geographical number format for the larger cities, a three digit area code, with a seven digit subscriber number where the first three digits identifies an area within the city.
0121 | Birmingham | 2 = B |
---|---|---|
0131 | Edinburgh | 3 = E |
0141 | Glasgow | 4 = G |
0151 | Liverpool | 5 = L |
0161 | Manchester | 6 = M |
0171 | Used for inner London until 2000 | |
0181 | Used for outer London until 2000 | |
0191 | Newcastle upon Tyne/Sunderland/Durham |
- (011x) xxx xxxx — the geographical number format for a second tier of large cities, a three digit area code, with a seven-digit subscriber number, e.g:
0113 | Leeds | |
---|---|---|
0114 | Sheffield | |
0115 | Nottingham | |
0116 | Leicester | |
0117 | Bristol | |
0118 | Reading | Phased in between 1996 and 1998 |
- (02x) xxxx xxxx — the geographical number format for areas of high population densities which had run out of spare numbers using six or seven digit numbers and now the most common format, a two digit area code with an 8-digit subscriber number. The short area code is known as a wide area code. e.g:
020 | London |
---|---|
023 | South Hampshire (Southampton and Portsmouth) |
024 | Coventry |
028 | Northern Ireland (Belfast 028 90xx xxxx, Londonderry/Derry 028 71xx xxxx) |
029 | Cardiff (may also become code for the rest of Wales) |
- (01xxx[x]) xxxx[x] — other geographical number formats; note that STD code and subscriber number do not have to total 11 digits, e.g:
(01204) xxxxx | Bolton (Daubhill) |
---|---|
(015396) xxxxx | Sedbergh |
(016977) xxxx | Brampton |
National Dialling Only ranges
These ranges have subscriber numbers beginning with the digits '0' or '1', eg:
01332 050 xxx | Derby |
---|---|
01382 006 xxx | Dundee |
0141 005 xxxx | Glasgow |
020 0003 xxxx | London |
In order to avoid confusion with codes beginning with these digits, the area code must always be dialled, even from within the same geographic exchange. Traditionally these have not been used for inbound calls, although these are now being allocated to Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) services. This has been problematic as some mobile phone operators in the UK do not allow access to these ranges, and there may also be difficulty accessing these numbers from outside the UK.
Nongeographic numbering
- 05x xxxx xxxx — Reserved for corporate numbering.
055 xxxx xxxx | Used by BT for its Broadband Voice service |
---|---|
056 xxxx xxxx | Allocated by Ofcom for VoIP services |
The 0500 range is used for some freephone services which were originally provided by Mercury Communications Ltd (now Cable & Wireless).
- 07xxx xxxxxx — mobile phones, pagers and personal numbering. Individual mobile phone companies are allocated different ranges within the 077xx, 078xx and 079xx area codes. Changes to mobile numbers were mostly straight replacements, such as Vodafone customers on the 0378 block became 07778.
070xx | Personal numbering |
---|---|
076xx | Pagers |
077xx | Mobile phones (former 03xx and 04xx — mostly Vodafone and O2 (formerly Cellnet) |
078xx | Mobile phones (former 05xx, 06xx and 08xx — mostly Vodafone and O2 (formerly Cellnet) |
079xx | Mobile phones (former 09xx — mostly Orange and T-Mobile (formerly one2one) |
- 08xx — Non-geographic fixed-rate, or special-rate services, e.g. Many UK businesses employ this type of number because of extra benefits 08xx numbers can provide, such as fax to email, virtual office applications, and also because they are totally portable - if your business moves, the 08xx number can move with you.
0800 xxx xxxx 0800 xxx xxx 0808 xxx xxxx | "Freephone" (free to caller), except usually for callers using mobile networks. | |
---|---|---|
0845 xxx xxxx | Special Services: Lower Rate | Note: Whilst these numbers are Local and National rate on a BT line with no discount plan, they virtually always cost more to call than geographic (01 and 02) numbers from other phone services. |
0870 xxx xxxx | Special Services: Higher Rate | |
0844 xxx xxxx | Special Services costing up to 5p per minute | |
0871 xxx xxxx | Special Services costing up to 10p per minute | |
082x xxx xxxx | Internet for Schools |
- 09xxx xxxxxx — Premium rate services (costing more than 10p and up to £1.50 per minute or costing more than 10p and up to £1.50 per call). Numbers beginning 0908 and 0909 are reserved for sexual entertainment services.
Crown dependencies
The Crown Dependencies of the Channel Islands (Jersey, Guernsey etc.) and the Isle of Man are not part of the UK but, as a legacy of their postal and telephone services being operated by the UK GPO until 1969, they continue to form part of the UK numbering plan, using the following ranges:
- Guernsey
01481 | Fixed line | 48 = GU |
---|---|---|
07781 | Mobile phones and pagers |
- Jersey
01534 | Fixed line | 53 = JE |
---|---|---|
07797 | Mobile phones and pagers |
- Isle of Man
01624 | Fixed line | 62 = MA |
---|---|---|
07624 | Mobile phones and pagers |
On the Isle of Man, both fixed and mobile phone numbers can be dialled locally in the six-digit format.
Although calls from the UK to these islands are charged at the same rate as those to geographic numbers in the UK, calls to the Channel Islands may be excluded from calling plans offering unlimited UK fixed line calls.
Drama numbers
Ofcom has also reserved certain number ranges for use in television dramas and films, so as to avoid the risk of people having their telephone numbers displayed, and receiving unwanted calls. This is similar to the use of fictitious telephone numbers in the United States with the digits 555. In most of the large cities with three-digit area codes a range of numbers is reserved, usually all the numbers starting with the digits 4960. For fictitious numbers in other areas the area code 01632 is reserved; this code is not in use, although 0632 was used for Newcastle upon Tyne until the late 1980s (63 = NE). There are also reserved ranges for fictitious mobile, free and premium rate numbers.
Special service numbers
Short codes beginning with 1 are reserved for telecom service providers' own functionality; some of the most well-known are codes for use with Caller ID, known in the UK as "Caller Display":
141 | Number withhold | when normally released |
---|---|---|
1470 | Number release | when normally withheld |
1471 | Call Return | caller may press 3 to return call |
The UK has two free emergency numbers — the traditional 999, which is still widely used, and the EU standard 112, which can be used in all member states of the European Union. Both 999 and 112 are used to contact all emergency services: Police, Fire Service, Ambulance Service, Mountain Rescue, Coastguard and Cave Rescue. The chargeable number 101 (10p per call) is being introduced in stages, with an aim to cover all of England and Wales by 2008, for "non-urgent emergencies".
The operator is obtained via 100, while directory enquiries, formerly 192, is now provided in the 118xxx range, e.g. 118 500, 118 888, by different companies. International Operator assistance is reached through "155".
Fixed line telephone subscribers have the opportunity to use an automated messaging service which takes messages when the called number is either engaged ("busy") or not answered within a given time. This can be accessed by calling 1571.
Since the early 1990s speaking clock services have been available throughout Britain, initially on 123, but now on 123456 (before this some areas used local clocks on numbers such as "8081"), but mobile networks sometimes allocate services such as voicemail or customer services to this number.
Two special telephone numbers within the regular code space have only eight digits, namely 0800 1111 the national ChildLine helpline, and 0845 4647 for NHS Direct medical advice.
History
The telephone service in the United Kingdom was originally provided by private companies and local councils. But by 1912–13 [1] all except the telephone service of Kingston upon Hull, Yorkshire and Guernsey had been bought out by the Post Office. Post Office Telephones also operated telephone services in Jersey until 1923 and the Isle of Man until 1969 when the islands took over responsibility for their own postal and telephone services - although the latter remained part of British Telecom until 1987.
Post Office Telephones was reorganised in 1980–81 [2] as British Telecommunications (British Telecom, or BT), and was the first nationalised industry to be privatised by the Conservative government. The Hull Telephone Department was itself sold by Hull City Council as Kingston Communications in the late 1990s and celebrated its centenary in 2004.
Director system
In 1922 the first 'Director' exchange was brought into service in Holborn, London and rolled out progressively across Greater London. A 3 digit code, represented by letters, identified the local exchange. Director schemes were gradually introduced in the other major cities of the UK - Birmingham, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Liverpool and Manchester.
Introduction of area codes
Subscriber Trunk Dialling (STD) was introduced in 1958 [3] to allow a caller to call another telephone directly instead of via a manual telephone exchange operator. Uniform exchange codes, usually called STD codes, were allocated for every exchange in the country, progressively as STD was rolled out. This process was not completed until 1979 [4].
The original concept was for STD to be a nationwide Director system, and in common with the Director system, the exchange codes were originally assigned based on two letters of the respective place's name and the corresponding numbers on a telephone dial. For example Aylesbury was given the STD code 0AY6, where the letter A can be found on the number 2 and the letter Y on the number 9. The letter O became a zero, such as for Bournemouth: 0BO2 where BO = 20. Originally, where a place's name began with the letter 'O' the code would begin with two zeros, such as Oxford: 0OX2 where OX = 09. These codes starting with '00' were later reallocated, freeing the prefix 00 for use by international direct-dialling.
For the Director areas a 2 or 3 digit code was used for the city. These were:
Area code | City | Notes |
---|---|---|
01 | London | See 01 for London below |
021 | Birmingham | (2 = B) |
031 | Edinburgh | (3 = E) |
041 | Glasgow | (4 = G) |
051 | Liverpool | (5 = L) |
061 | Manchester | (6 = M) |
The codes 071, 081, and 091 were reserved for later expansion, with the former two eventually being allocated to London (see below), and 091 to Tyne and Wear.
All figure dialling
The use of names was intended to provide a mnemonic for the exchange, but as more and more places were given STD codes the mnemonic link became more and more obscure, and this system became unworkable. The use of alphabetic exchange (area) codes was abandoned in 1966 in favour of all figure numbering. As such about 60% of current area codes are still based on the original alphabetic STD.
Calls to the Republic of Ireland
Until the late 1980s, calls to cities in the Republic of Ireland were made using short codes starting with 000:
Dublin 0001 Cork 0002 Drogheda 0004 Waterford 0005 Limerick 0006 Sligo 0007 Galway 0009
This was discontinued in the late 1980s, so that all calls to the Republic of Ireland from the UK had to be dialled in the international format using the international access code (since 1995, 00) and country code (353).
Although full international dialling is now used, calls from Northern Ireland to landlines in the Republic are charged at UK national or local rates, and calls from Great Britain to the Republic are charged at a special "Irish Republic" rate, higher than inland rates, but lower than those for elsewhere in Western Europe.
Number shortage
With growth in second phone lines, direct dial-in (DDI) lines, fax machines and multiple telecoms operators during the 1980s the demand for telephone numbers exceeded the available number ranges. A number of changes were made to the UK numbering plan.
01 for London
The first major change was in May 1990, when the London 01 area code was replaced with 071 and 081. Exchanges in central London used the 071 code with the remaining exchanges using the 081 code and formed a ring around the 071 area. Although this effectively doubled the available numbers it would not be the last change for the capital.
PhONE Day
On 'PhONE Day', 16 April 1995, the digit '1' was inserted into all UK geographic area codes: for example, central London's 071 became 0171. This was with a view to reorganising the numbering plan, so that the first two digits would indicate the type of service called:
Area code prefix | Service type |
---|---|
00 | International dialling |
01 | Geographic area codes |
02 | New geographic area codes |
03 | Geographic area code expansion |
04 | Reserved for future use |
05 | Corporate numbering |
06 | Reserved for future use |
07 | Mobile phones, pagers and personal numbering |
08 | Freephone and shared cost |
09 | Premium rate, similar to US 1 900 number range |
The international access code also changed on 'PhONE Day', from 010 to 00. Five new area codes were introduced for cities that were running low on phone numbers — and a digit was prepended to each existing local number.
City | New numbering | Old numbering | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Leeds | 0113 2xx xxxx | 0532 xxx xxx | 53 = LE |
Sheffield | 0114 2xx xxxx | 0742 xxx xxx | 74 = SH |
Nottingham | 0115 9xx xxxx | 0602 xxx xxx | 60 = NO |
Leicester | 0116 2xx xxxx | 0533 xxx xxx | 53 = LE |
Bristol | 0117 9xx xxxx | 0272 xxx xxx | 27 = BR |
Reading | 0118 9xx xxxx | 0734 xxx xxx → 01734 xxx xxx | 73 = RE; changed between 1996 and 1998, not on PhONE Day[5]. |
Note that the first digit of the local numbers within these codes is no longer restricted to those shown: for example, while all pre-'PhONE Day' Leeds numbers migrated to 0113 2xx xxxx, this numbering range has since been exhausted, and local numbers of the form 0113 3xx xxxx are now assigned.
Big Number Change
On 22 April 2000 the second phase of the plan came into operation, dubbed the "Big Number Change". With 02* freed up by the previous reorganisation, it could be re-used.
City | New numbering | Old numbering | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
London | 020 7xxx xxxx | 0171 xxx xxxx | Used for existing inner London numbers and new numbers London-wide |
020 8xxx xxxx | 0181 xxx xxxx | Used for existing outer London numbers and new numbers London-wide | |
020 3xxx xxxx | New phase of numbers, released London-wide from June 2005 | ||
Southampton | 023 80xx xxxx | 01703 xxxxxx | 70 = SO |
Portsmouth | 023 92xx xxxx | 01705 xxxxxx | 70 = PO |
Coventry | 024 76xx xxxx | 01203 xxxxxx | 20 = CO |
Cardiff | 029 20xx xxxx | 01222 xxxxxx | 22 = CA |
029 21xx xxxx | New phase of numbers from June 2005 |
Note that although Southampton and Portsmouth are one code from a code structure point of view, as of January 2006 calls between them are not local calls and the "codes" 02380 and 02392 are treated as separate by the BT site for determining local call area.
It is planned that the new codes will eventually cover a larger area than at present. For example, although 029 presently covers just the Cardiff area, it may in the future cover all of Wales. It is interesting that AW (All Wales) and CY (Cymru, the Welsh for Wales) are both represent on a telephone keypad as 29. Similarly 028, which is already the code for all of Northern Ireland is represented by 028 with AU (All Ulster) being represented by 28 on a keypad.
The transition codes for Northern Ireland are shown below. These can be accessed from the Republic of Ireland using either the domestic code 048, or the international code 00 44 28.
The prefixes for existing numbers in Northern Ireland are split up into 7 groups, roughly based upon the county in which the main exchange is based. The initial digit of each phone number is based on the designated county - for example, the first county alphabetically is County Antrim so numbers in this county start 2. The next county is County Armagh so numbers here start 3. The exception to this is the Greater Belfast area.
Town/City | Region | New numbering | Old numbering |
---|---|---|---|
Larne | County Antrim | 028 28xx xxxx | 01574 xxxxxx |
Armagh | County Armagh | 028 37xx xxxx | 01861 xxxxxx |
Newcastle | County Down | 028 437x xxxx | 013967 xxxxx |
Enniskillen | County Fermanagh | 028 66xx xxxx | 01365 xxx xxx |
Derry/Londonderry | County Derry/County Londonderry | 028 71xx xxxx | 01504 xxxxxx |
Dungannon | County Tyrone | 028 87xx xxxx | 01868 xxxxxx |
Omagh | County Tyrone | 028 82xx xxxx | 01662 xxxxxx |
Belfast | Greater Belfast | 028 90xx xxxx | 01232 xxx xxx |
In addition, mobile and pager numbers were all moved into the 07 range. Pagers moved into 076, while personal numbers moved to 070. Mobile numbers moved into the 077, 078 and 079 ranges. In addition, lo-call and nationalcall numbers migrated to 08xxx and premium rate numbers to 09xxx.
020 for London
The number change meant that London could return to a single area code. Furthermore, there is now no "inner/outer" split. Existing London numbers acquired the prefixes 7 or 8, but from that point on 020 7xxx xxxx and 020 8xxx xxxx numbers can be assigned or reused anywhere in the London area covered by the 020 code.
From June 2005 the regulator ceased to allocate number blocks to suppliers in the 7xxx xxxx and 8xxx xxxx ranges. From this date onwards all number allocations are in the 3xxx xxxx range and can be used anywhere in the 020 area. Although new blocks of 7xxx xxxx and 8xxx xxxx range numbers are no longer being allocated to suppliers, those that have not yet exhausted their existing blocks are able to continue to issue and re-issue them to their customers.
Numbers in the 020 0xxx xxxx and 020 1xxx xxx number ranges have also been made available. However, these numbers cannot be dialled without the 020 code and are called "London National Dialling" numbers.
It is a common misconception that London still has more than one area code, which may persist because of the perceived "prestige" of the old "central" area code 0171 or because the change was not effectively communicated. Note that the spacing 0207 xxx xxxx etc, although commonly seen, is incorrect. The code for London is 020, with an eight-digit local number. This misconception of area code and number separation is also seen in other areas of the country where an area code reduction was seen due to the Big Number Change, such as Reading numbers still being written 01189 xxxxxx, whereas the correct number sequence is 0118 9xxxxxx. See, for example, the Ofcom FAQ [6] (PDF file).
See also
External links
- UK Numbering Policy section of Ofcom's website
- UK National Telephone Numbering Plan (in PDF format)
- UK phone information
- Full automation of the telephone system: the White Paper which introduced STD. (The phone system was run by a Government department at that time.) Uses pre-decimal system (£sd) prices.