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Area codes 204, 431, and 584
Area codes 204, 431, and 584
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The area serviced by area codes 204, 431, and 584 in blue with neighbouring provinces, territories, and U.S. states in other colours

Area codes 204, 431, and 584 are telephone area codes in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) for the Canadian province of Manitoba. Area code 204 is one of the nine original North American area codes assigned to Canada in 1947. Area codes 431 and 584 were assigned to the same numbering plan area (NPA) in 2012 and 2022, respectively, forming an overlay complex.

History

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When the American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT&T) designed the first comprehensive North American telephone numbering plan in the 1940s, Manitoba was designated as a single numbering plan area (NPA) with area code 204.

In 2009, the Canadian Numbering Administrator forecast that area code 204 would be exhausted within a few years even though there were only 1.2 million people in the entire province. An area code provides about 7.8 million telephone numbers. However, Canada uses an allocation scheme that allots blocks of central office prefixes, comprising 10,000 numbers each, to competitive local exchange carriers even for the smallest hamlets. Canada does not implement number pooling. Therefore, once a number is allocated to a rate centre, it cannot be reassigned elsewhere even if a rate centre has more than enough numbers to service it. This resulted in thousands of wasted numbers. The ensuing number shortage was exacerbated by the proliferation of cell phones, particularly in and around Winnipeg.

In July 2010, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission approved a province-wide overlay with area code 431 for implementation in November 2012.[1] On July 30, 2012, 10-digit dialing became mandatory throughout the province.[2] Although that had the effect of allocating about 15.6 million numbers to a province of just over 1.2 million people, MTS and other carriers in the province preferred that method to a geographical split, which would have seen one part of the province retain area code 204 and another part receive the new area code 431. The province's telephone companies wanted to spare Manitobans, particularly in rural areas, the expense and burden of changing their numbers. Overlays have become the favoured method of relief in Canada, since they are an easy workaround for the number allocation system. No NPAs have been split in Canada since 1999.

Area code 584 was reserved as a third area code for the region in February 2017.[3] It was implemented on October 29, 2022.[4][5]

The incumbent local exchange carrier for the area codes is Bell MTS.

Service area and central office codes

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Calls to the following communities can be direct-dialed from Winnipeg as a local call: Dugald, Lockport, Lorette, Oakbank, St. Adolphe, St. Francois Xavier, Sanford, Starbuck, Stonewall, and Stony Mountain.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Area codes 204, 431, and 584 are telephone area codes in the (NANP) that serve the entire province of , , including major cities such as , Brandon, Steinbach, and . Area code 204 was one of the original 86 area codes established in 1947 under the initial NANP framework to cover the province-wide numbering needs of . By the early , increasing demand for telephone numbers, driven by and the proliferation of mobile and internet-based services, led to projections of exhaustion for 204 by 2013. In response, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) approved a province-wide overlay with area code 431, which entered service on November 3, 2012, requiring mandatory ten-digit local dialing across to distinguish between the two codes. Despite the addition of 431, further growth in telephone number usage accelerated the forecast exhaustion of the 204/431 complex to December 2023, prompting the CRTC to authorize a third overlay with area code 584 through Telecom Decision 2022-51. The 584 area code became available for new assignments starting October 29, 2022, without requiring changes to existing numbers or geographic splits, maintaining the distributed overlay structure for the province. This triple-overlay system ensures continued availability of NANP numbers in while supporting the transition to as the standard.

Overview

Introduction

Area codes 204, 431, and 584 form an overlay complex within the (NANP), a numbering system established in 1947 to standardize direct-distance dialing across the , , and certain territories. The NANP divides geographic regions into numbering plan areas (NPAs), each identified by a three-digit area code, to facilitate efficient allocation of telephone numbers. Area code 204 was one of the original 86 codes assigned in , covering the entire province of in . Due to growing demand for telephone numbers driven by population increases and telecommunications expansion, area code 431 was introduced as a province-wide overlay on November 3, 2012, allowing both codes to serve the same territory without requiring existing subscribers to change numbers. Similarly, area code 584 was added on October 29, 2022, as another all-services overlay to address projected exhaustion of the 204/431 complex by late 2023. This overlay system serves Manitoba's estimated population of approximately 1.51 million residents as of mid-2025, with the primary urban center being Winnipeg, home to over 800,000 people. The configuration ensures no geographic splits, enabling ten-digit local dialing across the province for all landline, wireless, and voice over IP services.

Role in Manitoba's Telecommunications

The incumbent local exchange carrier (ILEC) for area codes 204, 431, and 584 in Manitoba is Bell MTS, a subsidiary of BCE Inc., which provides essential local voice services and maintains the underlying infrastructure for telephone numbering in the province. Competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs), such as Allstream (a Zayo Group company), also operate within this framework, offering alternative local services through interconnection agreements approved by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC). These carriers collectively ensure a competitive market for telecommunications, with Bell MTS handling the majority of fixed-line connections while CLECs provide options for businesses and specialized services. Area codes 204, 431, and 584 play a central role in supporting fixed-line , mobile services, and Voice over (VoIP) across Manitoba's urban centers like and rural regions, enabling seamless connectivity for residential and commercial users. , as the primary provider, delivers these services through its fibre-optic and networks, which extend to remote agricultural communities and manufacturing hubs, facilitating real-time coordination essential for operations in diverse terrains. The overlay structure of these codes allows for expanded numbering capacity without requiring customers to change existing phone numbers, thereby minimizing disruptions to ongoing services. Economically, these area codes underpin Manitoba's key sectors by enabling reliable business communications; for instance, infrastructure supports precision farming in , supply chain management in , and inter-agency coordination in operations, contributing to the province's overall . In 2023, the sector in generated $59.6 billion in revenues, with significant investments in networks that bolster productivity in resource-dependent regions like Manitoba. As of early 2025, cellular mobile connections nationwide exceed 104% of the , reflecting over 90% mobile penetration rates that drive economic activity through enhanced in Manitoba's mixed urban-rural landscape. The addition of overlays, such as 584 in , has been critical in averting number exhaustion, ensuring uninterrupted service growth amid rising demand from mobile and VoIP adoption.

Historical Development

Assignment of Area Code 204

Area code 204 was established in October 1947 as one of the original 86 numbering plan areas in the (NANP), initially encompassing the entire province of . Developed by and Bell Laboratories, the NANP assigned this code to support across , with 204 designated specifically for Manitoba's telephone network due to its geographic and demographic scale at the time. In its early years, Manitoba's relied heavily on manual switchboards operated by operators, a system that had been in place since the province's first exchange in in 1881. The transition to automatic dialing began in urban centers like , which achieved full dial service by 1926, making it the first major Canadian city to do so. Rural areas followed more gradually, with the first community dial offices introduced in 1949, accelerating through the and as manual systems were phased out province-wide; by the early , over 90 automatic dial offices served rural , reflecting technological advancements that improved connectivity without immediate pressure on numbering resources. The growth of area code 204's usage was closely linked to Manitoba's post-World War II population expansion, which rose from approximately 730,000 residents in to about 777,000 by , driven by economic recovery and migration. This boom continued into the , when the population surpassed 1 million, increasing telephone demand and leading to the assignment of initial central office prefixes under the 204 code to accommodate expanding urban and rural subscribers. Due to the province's relatively low and slower growth compared to more urbanized regions, no area code splits or relief measures were planned for 204 until the late .

Overlay with Area Code 431

The numbering resources for area code 204 were projected to exhaust by January 2011, driven by rapid growth in telephone subscriptions and prior inefficient assignments of central codes that limited available numbers despite Manitoba's relatively small . To mitigate this, the declared a condition in May 2010 and implemented temporary of central codes, extending the projected exhaustion to May 2013. In response, the CRTC approved a distributed overlay with new area code 431 in Telecom Decision CRTC 2010-526, issued on , 2010, to cover the entire geographic area of 204 without requiring customers to change existing numbers. The overlay was selected over alternatives like geographic splits due to the province's dispersed population and the need to preserve local calling areas, with implementation scheduled for November 3, 2012, when new telephone numbers would begin using 431. The transition to the overlay mandated a shift to 10-digit local dialing to accommodate both area codes. Permissive 10-digit dialing, allowing both 7- and 10-digit calls with automatic completion of the latter, ran from July 29 to October 20, 2012, followed by mandatory 10-digit dialing starting 20 October 2012, fully enforced by February 1, 2013. An exception preserved 7-digit dialing for local calls between , (204), and Creighton, Saskatchewan (306). To ensure smooth adoption, the CRTC required telecommunications service providers (TSPs) to conduct public education campaigns, including industry-standard recorded announcements intercepting invalid 7-digit calls during permissive and mandatory periods, as well as media outreach and signage updates. These efforts, coordinated by carriers such as MTS Allstream, Bell, and TELUS through the dedicated website dial10.ca, informed residents on reprogramming devices like alarm systems and promoting the change starting December 2011.

Addition of Area Code 584

Following the introduction of area code 431 as an overlay on 204, the combined numbering resources for Manitoba's area code complex faced renewed exhaustion pressures. Projections from the Canadian Numbering Authority (CNA) indicated that the 204/431 pool would deplete by December 2023, accelerated by the proliferation of voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) services, wireless devices, and other IP-enabled telecommunications demands. This jeopardy status was entered in July 2021 and later removed after planning advanced, but the underlying demand growth necessitated further relief. In response, the CNA, through its Relief Planning Committee (RPC), recommended a distributed overlay using area code 584, which had been reserved for since February 2017 in anticipation of future needs. The RPC's report, submitted in early 2022 based on 2021 planning documents, proposed implementation by October 2022 to avert shortages. The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) approved this relief plan in Telecom Decision CRTC 2022-51 on 24 February 2022, confirming 584 as the new overlay code to cover the entire province without geographic splits or subscriber impacts. Activation proceeded on 29 October 2022, when telecommunications carriers began assigning new numbers with the 584 prefix, leveraging the existing 10-digit dialing procedures already mandated since the 431 overlay. No additional dialing changes were required for consumers. Initial central office code allocations focused on the 584-2xx series (e.g., 584-200 through 584-299) to carriers, coordinated through the CNA's to ensure equitable distribution and minimize service disruptions during rollout. The supported public education efforts, including notifications and website updates, to facilitate smooth adoption.

Service Coverage

Geographic Scope

Area codes 204, 431, and 584 collectively serve the entire province of , encompassing a land area of approximately 647,797 square kilometers and a population of about 1.51 million residents as of July 1, 2025. This coverage extends uniformly across urban centers, rural regions, and remote northern communities, including the metropolitan area with over 850,000 inhabitants and isolated locales such as Churchill on . As overlay codes within the , they provide numbering relief without imposing geographic splits or boundaries, ensuring equitable access to telephone services for all residents, including urban, rural, and Indigenous populations. The province operates primarily within the (UTC-6), with observed from the second Sunday in March to the first Sunday in , aligning most telecommunications operations under a single temporal framework. This uniformity facilitates seamless intra-provincial calling, though minor variations in local practices may occur near borders due to adjacent provinces' observances. Manitoba's area codes integrate with neighboring regions through established local calling boundaries, allowing toll-free calls to select exchanges in (area codes 306 and 367), such as one-way from Creighton to . These cross-provincial arrangements, defined by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), support economic and social connectivity without additional long-distance charges for qualifying calls.

Rate Centers and Communities

The primary rate centers for area codes 204, 431, and 584 encompass the province of , with serving as the largest, covering the metropolitan area and surrounding suburbs. Other major rate centers include Brandon in the southwest, Thompson in the north, and Steinbach in the southeast, each acting as hubs for local calling within their respective regions. These centers facilitate intra-provincial connectivity, where calls within the same rate center or designated local areas are treated as local without long-distance charges. Communities accessible as local calls from the Winnipeg rate center include Dugald, Headingley, Île-des-Chênes, Lorette, Lockport, Oakbank, Sanford, St. Adolphe, St. François Xavier, Starbuck, Stonewall, and Stony Mountain, among approximately 50 smaller towns and rural locales integrated into the extended Winnipeg local calling area. This setup supports seamless communication for commuters and nearby residents without additional fees. In rural and agricultural regions, local calling areas are often extended to accommodate vast distances between communities, ensuring farmers and remote households maintain affordable access to like emergency lines and business contacts. The overlay structure of these area codes has preserved these boundaries without splits, avoiding disruptions to established local calling patterns. As of 2025, growing suburbs such as Morden and Winkler, located in the Pembina Valley region near the U.S. border, continue to be served under the Steinbach rate center umbrella, reflecting population expansion and increased demand for local telecommunications infrastructure.

Technical Implementation

Dialing Procedures

In Manitoba, all local calls within the area codes 204, 431, and 584 require mandatory 10-digit dialing, consisting of the area code followed by the seven-digit telephone number, a procedure implemented to accommodate the overlays and distinguish between multiple area codes serving the same geographic region. This change originated with the introduction of area code 431 as an overlay to 204, where a permissive dialing period allowed both seven-digit and 10-digit local calls from 29 July to 20 October 2012, during which seven-digit calls were automatically routed with recorded announcements. Mandatory 10-digit dialing commenced on 20 October 2012, with support for seven-digit dialing fully phased out by 3 March 2013 through escalating announcements and network adjustments. The subsequent overlay of area code 584 in 2022 maintained this 10-digit requirement without alteration, ensuring consistency across the province-wide numbering plan complex. For long-distance calls originating in Manitoba to destinations outside the province but within the (NANP), users must dial 1 followed by the three-digit area code and the seven-digit telephone number. Calls to international destinations outside the NANP require the international direct dial prefix 011 followed by the , area code, and local number, while numbers in Manitoba's 204/431/584 complex are accessed internationally using the format +1 followed by the area code and seven digits. Emergency dialing procedures remain unaffected by the overlays, with 911 continuing as the universal three-digit access code for emergency services across all carriers and area codes in , requiring no area code or additional digits. Telecommunications carriers in discontinued support for permissive seven-digit local dialing by early 2013 following the 431 overlay transition, and by 2025, all automated systems, including , alarm panels, and machines, have been required to accommodate the full 204/431/584 complex through network updates completed post-2022 implementation of 584.

Central Office Codes and Prefixes

Central office codes, also known as NXX prefixes, form the second three digits of a ten-digit North American telephone number and identify specific exchanges or rate centers within the area codes. In Manitoba, the assignment of these prefixes for area codes 204, 431, and 584 is managed by the Canadian Numbering Administrator (CNA), which operates under the oversight of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC). The CNA allocates central office codes in blocks, where each full NXX prefix represents 10,000 telephone numbers, but due to thousands-block number pooling implemented in 2025, service providers typically receive assignments in smaller 1,000-number blocks within a prefix to optimize resource use and delay number exhaustion. Thousands-block pooling was implemented across Canada on October 6, 2025, allowing further conservation of numbering resources. For area code 204, the original numbering plan area established in 1947, approximately 287 central office prefixes are active as of November 2025, primarily serving legacy exchanges across the province. These include foundational assignments such as 204-233, which is associated with and operated by MTS Inc., along with others like 204-200 and 204-201, both serving through providers including and Manitoba Telecom Services. The majority of these prefixes support urban centers like and Brandon, with the CNA tracking their status to ensure efficient distribution. Area code 431, introduced as an overlay in , has approximately 111 active central office prefixes as of November 2025, focusing on post-overlay expansions to accommodate growing demand. Examples from the 300 series include 431-300 serving Austin, 431-301 for Starbuck, and 431-302 assigned to Stonewall, all marked as active and distributed to carriers such as . These prefixes extend coverage to both urban and rural rate centers, including and Thompson, with the CNA continuing to assign blocks as needed to prevent depletion. Since its activation in October 2022, area code 584 has seen more limited but steadily growing assignments, with approximately 17 active central office prefixes as of November 2025. Representative examples include 584-200 for Poplar Point, 584-300 serving Crystal City, and 584-301 assigned to Stonewall, primarily through providers like IXICA Communications Inc. and . Additional prefixes such as 584-290 and 584-291 support , while 584-888 is operated by Fido Solutions Inc. in the same city; the CNA anticipates further activations to reach broader provincial needs.

Current Status and Future Outlook

Usage and Number Exhaustion

As of 2025, the area codes 204, 431, and 584 collectively provide with a numbering pool of approximately 24 million potential numbers, enabled by the 2022 introduction of the 584 overlay to address rising demand in the . This expanded capacity has relieved immediate pressure on the original 204 and overlay 431 codes, supporting ongoing assignment of numbers for residential, mobile, and use without current shortages. The three-code structure operates under a 10-digit local dialing plan, ensuring efficient resource distribution across the 's rate centers. Demand for numbers in this numbering plan area is primarily driven by near-universal mobile phone adoption, with cellular connections in Canada reaching approximately 38 million as of 2024—representing about 95% of the population—and adoption rates approaching 100% nationwide. Additional pressure comes from the proliferation of Internet of Things (IoT) devices and connected equipment requiring SIM cards and dedicated telephone numbers, alongside steady growth in business lines for telecommunications services. These factors have accelerated number consumption, particularly in urban centers like Winnipeg, where mobile and data services dominate usage patterns. Recent projections from the Canadian Numbering Authority (CNA) indicate that the 204/431/584 pool is not expected to face exhaustion until the mid-2030s, based on current assignment trends and without anticipating major shifts in or demand. This timeline reflects the effective relief provided by the 584 overlay and assumes continued efficient management of resources through thousands-block pooling. Monitoring of usage occurs via semi-annual Numbering Resource Utilization Forecasts (NRUF) and annual reports from the CNA and , which track inventory levels, assignment rates, and forecasts for Canadian NPAs, with regulatory oversight by the CRTC to ensure sustainable allocation.

Impacts and Regulatory Oversight

The introduction of area codes 431 and 584 as overlays on the existing 204 area code has resulted in minimal disruption to users in , primarily because both overlays maintained the established 10-digit local dialing procedure that was already mandatory province-wide following the 2012 implementation of 431. Users were not required to change their numbers, and the distributed overlay method for 584, activated on , 2022, ensured continuity without altering service coverage or call routing. Post-implementation monitoring through 2025 has revealed no significant reported issues, with awareness campaigns by providers effectively informing the public of the change and preventing widespread confusion. Businesses experienced limited operational impacts from the overlays, as the retention of existing numbers avoided the need for wholesale customer notifications or service interruptions. Adaptations primarily involved updating internal systems, such as reprogramming private branch exchange (PBX) equipment to recognize the new area codes and revising external materials like signage, websites, and printed stationery to reflect the expanded numbering options. These changes, while necessitating some administrative effort, were facilitated by the prior familiarity with 10-digit dialing from the 431 overlay. The addition of 584 has provided tangible benefits by expanding the available telephone number pool, supporting business growth in Manitoba's telecommunications-dependent economy without the higher costs associated with geographic splits. Regulatory oversight for these area codes falls under the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), which approves relief plans to address numbering exhaust and ensures equitable implementation across the province. The Canadian Numbering Administrator (CNA), operated by the Canadian Numbering Administration Consortium (CNAC), manages the assignment of central office codes and monitors resource utilization to prevent future shortages. Public consultations played a key role in both overlays: for 431, the CRTC initiated proceedings via in May 2009, leading to the approval of the overlay in Telecom Decision CRTC 2010-526; similarly, for 584, in January 2021 gathered input from stakeholders, culminating in Telecom Decision CRTC 2022-51. These processes emphasized and minimal impact, aligning with broader CRTC guidelines for relief.

References

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