List of North American Numbering Plan Area Codes - 700-799

700-799

700: Long Distance carrier use for pre-subscribing phone numbers, 1-700-555-4141 most often gives a recorded message indicating the default carrier on a line.

701: North Dakota (all)

702: Nevada (almost all of Clark County, including all of the Las Vegas Valley, including Henderson and Boulder City)

  • Originally covered all of Nevada; split in 1998 to create 775.

703: Virginia (Northern Virginia: mostly the suburbs of Washington, D.C., including Alexandria, Arlington County, Fairfax County, Prince William County, and eastern Loudoun County.

  • Originally covered all of Virginia; split to create 804 in 1973 and 540 in 1995.
  • Overlain by 571 in 2000.

704: North Carolina (Charlotte, Concord, Gastonia, Salisbury, and much of south-central North Carolina)

  • Originally covered all of North Carolina; split to create 919 in 1954 and 828 in 1998.
  • Overlain by 980 in 2001.

705: Ontario: (Northeastern Ontario and Central Ontario: Greater Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie, North Bay, etc.)

  • Created in 1957 from parts of 519 and 613.
  • Split in 1962 to create 807.
  • Overlain by 249 in 2011.

706: Georgia (Athens, Augusta, Columbus, Carrollton, Carroll County, Cartersville, Dalton, Rome, and much of northwestern, northeastern and eastern Georgia, with an exclave in western Georgia)

  • Created in 1992 by split from 404.
  • Overlain by 762.
  • Served portions of Baja California, Mexico prior to 1990.
  • One of the few non-contiguous area codes in North America.

707: California (Vallejo, Crescent City, Eureka, Redwoods National Park, Santa Rosa, Ukiah, and most of northwestern California)

  • Created in 1959 by split from 415.

708: Illinois (Berwyn, Chicago Heights, Cicero, Elmwood Park, Evergreen Park, Oak Forest, Oak Park, Skokie, Tinley Park, and other southern and inner-western suburbs of Chicago.

  • Created in 1989 by split from 312.
  • Split twice in 1996 to create 847 and 630.

709: Newfoundland and Labrador

  • Created in 1962 by split from 506.

710: U.S. Government Special Services

711: Telecommunications device for the deaf/Relay Service for TTY to Voice and Voice to TTY

712: Iowa (Sioux City, Council Bluffs, Denison, and most of western Iowa). This is one of the original area codes of the U.S. that has gone unchanged and undivided. This is because for some reason, Iowa was given three area codes to begin with back in 1948, even though it did not need that many.

713: Texas (Houston area)—overlays with 281 and 832

  • Split to create 409 (1983) and 281 (1996); 713 and 281 were later un-split to become an overlay, and further overlain by 832 in 1999.

714: California: Orange County: Anaheim, Fullerton, Garden Grove, Huntington Beach, Irvine, Newport Beach, Orange, Santa Ana, etc.)

  • Created in 1951 by splitting off from 213, when it did include San Diego County and several other counties.
  • Repeatedly split to create 619 in 1982; 909 in 1992; and 949 in 1998.
  • Overlain by 657 in 2008.

715: Wisconsin (Wausau, Eau Claire, Rhinelander, and most of northern Wisconsin)

  • Split in 1955 to create part of 608.
  • Overlain by 534 in 2010.

716: New York State (Buffalo, Niagara Falls, Olean, and parts of western New York)

  • Split in 1954 to create part of 607.
  • Split in 2002 to create 585.

717: Pennsylvania (Harrisburg, Gettysburg, Lancaster, York and most of south-central Pennsylvania)

  • Split in 1998 to create 570.

718: New York State (New York City except for Manhattan, but this area code includes Marble Hill, a neighborhood of the Borough of Manhattan located on the mainland.

  • Created in 1984 by splitting it off from 212.
  • Overlain by 347, 917 and 929.

719: Colorado (Colorado Springs, Pueblo, Florence, Leadville, Limon, Trinidad, La Junta, and most of southeastern Colorado)

  • Created in 1988 by being split off from 303.

720: Colorado

  • Overlain on 303 in 1998.

721: Sint Maarten

  • Joined the NANP on September 30, 2011; previously +599.

722–723: not used

724: Pennsylvania (Washington, Greensburg, Indiana, New Castle, Uniontown, Butler, and the majority of Southwestern Pennsylvania outside of Pittsburgh's Allegheny County)

  • Created in 1998 by split from 412.
  • Overlain by 878 in 2001.

725–726: not used

727: Florida (all of Pinellas County including St. Petersburg, Clearwater, Dunedin, Palm Harbor, Tarpon Springs, and the coastal parts of Pasco County)

  • Created in 1998 by split from 813.

728–729: not used

730: Illinois—proposed overlay of 618

731: Tennessee (most of West Tennessee—excluding Metropolitan Memphis and Shelby County (area code 901)—but including Dyersburg, Jackson, Martin, Paris, Union City, and Crockett County)

  • Created in 2001 by split from 901.

732: New Jersey (New Brunswick, Lakewood, Neptune, Fort Dix, and most of east-central New Jersey—but not Atlantic City)

  • Created in 1997 by split from 908.
  • Overlain by 848 in 2001.
  • Mnemonic: SEA

733: not used

734: Michigan (Ann Arbor, Hell, Monroe, Plymouth, Romulus, Wayne, Ypsilanti, and the southwestern suburbs of Detroit)

  • Created in 1997 by split from 313.

735–736: not used

737: Will overlay 512 (Texas) in July of 2013.

738–739: not used

740: Ohio (Suburban Columbus, central Ohio outside of Franklin County, excluding the Marysville area, together with southeastern Ohio: Athens, Lancaster, Cambridge, Delaware, Ironton, Marietta, Mt. Vernon, Newark, Portsmouth, Steubenville, Washington Court House, and Zanesville)

  • Created in 1997 by split from 614.

741: not used

742: Reserved as a future area code in the 289/905 region of Ontario, Canada (proposed to be overlain by 365 in 2013).

743–746: not used

747: California (Los Angeles County, San Fernando Valley): an overlay onto 818, effective on May 18, 2009.

748–753: not used

754: Overlaid Florida area code 954 in 2001.

755–756: not used

757: Virginia (Part of Hampton Roads and the Eastern Shore of Virginia)

  • Created in 1996 by split from 804.

758: Saint Lucia (all)

  • Created in 1996 by split from 809.
  • Mnemonic: SLU

759: not used

760: California (Bishop, Ridgecrest, Barstow—eastern portions of San Bernardino County and Riverside County, including Palm Springs, Palm Desert, and Indio—Imperial County, and parts of northern and eastern San Diego County, including Oceanside and other northern suburbs of San Diego, California.) In summary: most of the desert and mountain portions of southeastern California.

  • Created in 1997 by split from 619. This was the first part of North America to have its code changed three times: from 213 to 714 in 1951, to 619 in 1982, and to 760 in 1997.
  • Overlain by 442 in 2009.

761: Currently reserved for split or overlay of 561, Palm Beach County, Florida.

762: Georgia: an overlay of 706

763: Minnesota (Brooklyn Park, Plymouth, Maple Grove, Monticello, Elk River, Fridley, Blaine, and the northwest suburban area of Minneapolis)

  • Created in 2000 (along with 952) by three-way split from 612.

764 is assigned for numbering relief to 650 (western San Francisco Bay, including Contra Costa County) but no date has been scheduled for this to go into effect.

765: Indiana (Lafayette, Marion, Muncie, Richmond, West Lafayette, and most of central Indiana excluding Indianapolis and immediate suburbs.)

  • Created in 1997 by split from 317.

766: not used

767: Commonwealth of Dominica (all)—split from 809

  • Created in 1997 by split from 809.
  • Mnemonic: ROS for Roseau, Dominica's largest city.

768: not used

769: Mississippi

  • Overlain onto 601 in 2005.

770: Georgia (Marietta, Carrollton, Gainesville, Jonesboro, Lawrenceville, Roswell, Stone Mountain, and much of north-central Georgia outside of Atlanta's Interstate 285 Perimeter Highway). Area code 770 is shaped like a donut, with Atlanta, Chamblee, Decatur, and Tucker 404 in its hole.

  • Created in 1995 by split from 404.
  • Overlain by 678 in 1998.

771: not used

772: Florida (Fort Pierce, Port Saint Lucie, Sebastian, Stuart, and Vero Beach, and all of Indian River County and Martin County)

  • Created by splitting it off from 561.

773: Illinois (City of Chicago, excluding downtown)

  • Created in 1996 by split from 312.
  • Overlain in 2009 by 872.

774: Massachusetts

  • Overlain on 508 in 2001.

775: Nevada (Carson City, Reno, Elko, Ely, Sparks, Winnemucca, Great Basin National Park, Naval Air Station Fallon, and all of Nevada except for most of Clark County in southernmost Nevada)

  • Created in 1998 by split from 702.

776–777: not used

778: British Columbia (all)

  • Created in 2001 as concentrated overlay of 604; extended in 2008 to cover all of 604 and 250

779: Illinois

  • Overlain on 815 in 2007.

780: Alberta (Edmonton, Jasper, Grande Prairie, Peace River, and all of northern Alberta). This area code overlays onto 587 and also 403 in southern Alberta.

  • Created in 1999 by split from 403.

781: Massachusetts (Saugus, Norwood, Waltham Woburn, and other suburbs of Boston along Route 128)

  • Created in 1997 by split from 617.
  • Overlain by 339 in 2001.

782: Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island This area code overlays onto 902.

  • Created in 2012 to overlay 902, 10 digit dialing to start August 2014, overlay to be complete November 16 2014. Starting in 2014 all new numbers will begin with 782

783: not used

784: Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (all). Was split from 809

  • Created in 1998 by split from 809.
  • Mnemonic: SVG or SVI

785: Kansas (Topeka, Salina, Colby, Lawrence, Manhattan, and all of northern and central Kansas not including the Kansas City Metropolitan Area.

  • Created in 1997 by spliting it from 913.

786: Florida (Miami-Dade County and the Florida Keys)

  • Overlain on 305 only in Miami-Dade County in 1998. Overlay extended to the Keys in 2008.
  • Mnemonic: SUN

787: Puerto Rico

  • Created in 1996 by split from 809.
  • Overlain by 939 in 2001.
  • Mnemonic: PUR or PTR

788–789: not used

790–799: Reserved for potential North American Numbering Plan expansion

Read more about this topic:  List Of North American Numbering Plan Area Codes