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Area code 575
Area code 575
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Area code 435Area code 970Area code 719Area code 580Area code 806Area code 928Area code 520Area code 432Area code 915Area code 505Area code 575
Map of area codes for the state of New Mexico and bordering regions.

Area code 575 is a telephone area code in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) for the U.S. state of New Mexico. The area code was created in 2007 in an area code split of area code 505, whose service area was reduced to the Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Farmington, and Gallup regions to provide more telephone numbers to the most populated parts of the state. Area code 575 serves the rest of the state.

History

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When the American Telephone and Telegraph Company established the first nationwide telephone numbering plan in 1947, the state of New Mexico was designated as a single numbering plan area and was assigned area code 505 in the group of 86 original North American area codes.

On October 7, 2007, the numbering plan area was reduced in size to the high-population centers in the northwest of the state, and the rest of the state was renumbered with area code 575.[1]

The area code has been the last area code in the United States introduced by an area code split.[2] All new area codes added in the U.S. since have been by overlays, in which a new code is added to an existing NPA.

Prior to October 2021, area code 575 had telephone numbers assigned for the central office code 988. In 2020, 988 was designated nationwide as a dialing code for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, which created a conflict for exchanges that permit seven-digit dialing. This area code was therefore scheduled to transition to ten-digit dialing by October 24, 2021.[3]

Service area

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At the time of the creation of 575, the numbering plan area comprised the following 120 rate centers.[1]

  • Alamogordo
  • Alto
  • Angel Fire
  • Animas
  • Antelope Ridge
  • Anthony
  • Anton Chico
  • Arch
  • Artesia
  • Bayard
  • Bellview
  • Bingham
  • Canjilon
  • Cannon Air Force Base
  • Capitan
  • Carlsbad
  • Carlsbad Caverns
  • Carrizozo
  • Causey
  • Chama
  • Chaparral
  • Cimarron
  • Clayton
  • Cliff
  • Cloudcroft
  • Clovis
  • Columbus
  • Conchas Dam
  • Corona
  • Cottonwood
  • Cuba
  • Datil
  • Dell City
  • Deming
  • Des Moines
  • Dexter
  • Dora
  • Dulce
  • El Rito
  • El Valle
  • Elida
  • Eunice
  • Floyd
  • Fort Sumner
  • Gallina
  • Glenwood
  • Grady
  • Guadalupe Peak
  • Hagerman
  • Hatch
  • Hillsboro
  • Hobbs
  • Hondo
  • Hope
  • House
  • Jal
  • Jemez Springs
  • Kenton
  • La Mesa
  • Lakewood
  • Las Cruces
  • Lindrith
  • Loco Hills
  • Logan
  • Lordsburg
  • Loving
  • Lovington
  • Luna
  • Lybrook
  • Magdalena
  • Maljamar
  • Maxwell
  • Mayhill
  • Melrose
  • Mescalero
  • Milnesand
  • Mimbres
  • Mora
  • Mosquero
  • Nara Visa
  • Penasco
  • Playas
  • Pleasant Hill
  • Portales
  • Queen
  • Quemado
  • Questa
  • Ragland
  • Ranchvale
  • Raton
  • Red River
  • Reserve
  • Rodeo
  • Roswell
  • Roy
  • Ruidoso
  • Ruidoso Downs
  • San Jon
  • San Ysidro
  • Santa Rosa
  • Santa Teresa
  • Silver City
  • Socorro
  • South Clovis
  • Springer
  • Taos
  • Tatum
  • Texico
  • Tierra Amarilla
  • Timberon
  • Trementina
  • Truth or Consequences
  • Tucumcari
  • Tularosa
  • Vallecitos
  • Vaughn
  • Virden
  • Wagon Mound
  • Weber City
  • White Lakes

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Area code 575 is a telephone area code within the (NANP) that serves the majority of the U.S. state of , encompassing southern, eastern, central, and northern regions while excluding the Albuquerque–Santa Fe corridor and northwestern areas covered by . Introduced on October 7, 2007, as a geographic split from the overburdened area code 505, the creation of 575 was necessitated by the exhaustion of available telephone numbers in New Mexico's rapidly growing population centers. The split divided the state geographically, with 505 retained for the northwest (including Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Farmington, and Gallup) and 575 serving the remaining territory to accommodate future demand, with no immediate overlays planned. The area code spans 27 counties and over 130 cities and towns, including major population centers such as Las Cruces (the second-largest city in ), Roswell, Hobbs, Clovis, Carlsbad, Alamogordo, , Silver City, and Taos. These areas feature diverse geography, from the in the south to the in the north, supporting agriculture, oil and gas extraction, tourism, and military installations like . In 2021, the mandated a transition to 10-digit local dialing (area code plus seven-digit number) within the 575 and 505 area codes to enable implementation of the Lifeline, effective October 24 of that year. This change, approved by the Public Regulation Commission earlier, ensures long-term sustainability for in the region amid ongoing and technological advancements.

History

Creation from Area Code 505

Area code 505 was established on October 6, 1947, as one of the original 86 area codes in the , initially covering the entire state of . By the mid-2000s, rapid , economic development, and surging demand for telephone numbers—driven by the expansion of services and new lines—threatened to exhaust the available central office codes in the 505 numbering plan area (NPA), with projections indicating depletion as early as the first quarter of 2009. To avert this crisis, the Administration () reactivated relief planning for the 505 NPA in late 2005, collaborating with stakeholders and the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission (NMPRC). In Case No. 06-00141-UT, the NMPRC approved a two-way geographic split of the 505 NPA on November 9, 2006, introducing area code 575 to serve southeastern and portions of the southwest, while retaining 505 for the northern and central parts of the state, including the Albuquerque and Santa Fe metropolitan areas. This split was designed to equitably distribute numbering resources, with 575 encompassing approximately 120 rate centers in the affected regions to accommodate ongoing demand without immediate need for overlays. Permissive 10-digit dialing for the new 575 NPA began on October 7, 2007, allowing a transition period before mandatory implementation the following year.

Implementation and Transition

The implementation of area code 575 proceeded as a geographic split of , following approval by the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission in Case No. 06-00141-UT on November 9, 2006. The new code entered service at 12:01 a.m. Mountain Time on October 7, 2007, reducing the 505 service area to northern and northwestern while assigning 575 to the southern, eastern, and remaining central portions of the state. This activation marked 575 as the 333rd area code introduced in the . A permissive dialing period ran from October 7, 2007, to October 5, 2008, permitting callers in the split regions to dial local calls using either 7 digits or 10 digits (including the area code), with both 505 and 575 accepted interchangeably. During this time, incorrect area code usage triggered an intercept recording to guide users. Mandatory 10-digit dialing with the correct area code took effect on , 2008, as the official enforcement date for the split. The recorded announcements continued until January 11, 2009, to support the transition. The Public Regulation Commission directed providers to conduct public awareness campaigns, which included mailings to customers, media announcements, and programming updates to phone systems and equipment. These efforts aimed to minimize disruption during the switchover. Existing telephone numbers in northern retained the 505 prefix with no changes required for residents there, but numbers in the 575 region—previously under 505—were automatically updated to the new prefix, requiring affected users to revise directories, , and compatible devices. Technical preparations encompassed network testing starting September 8, 2007, using designated test numbers such as 575-600-1234 and updates to central office switches across the state. Coordination occurred among key providers, including Qwest Corporation and CenturyTel, to activate the 575 codes in their systems and integrate changes into the Local Exchange Routing Guide by July 11, 2008, for the first assignments of new numbers.

Developments Since 2007

Since its creation in 2007, area code 575 has remained a standalone code without any subsequent overlays or splits, reflecting the relatively stable demand for telephone numbers in its primarily rural service area across southeastern and . The Administrator () continues to monitor central office code utilization for 575, with no relief planning initiated as of 2025 due to adequate resource availability. NANPA's latest projections, based on updated demand forecasts, indicate that area code 575 will not exhaust its available numbering resources until the fourth quarter of 2034, providing sufficient capacity well beyond 2030. This timeline has been revised earlier from previous estimates—such as a 2050 projection in 2022—due to refined modeling of growth rates, though the area's lower and rural character contribute to slower overall number consumption compared to urban centers. These projections account for factors like thousands-block number pooling, which helps distribute resources more efficiently among carriers. In the 2010s, area code 575 accommodated national updates to wireless local number portability (WLNP) without requiring changes to the code itself, aligning with (FCC) mandates that standardized porting processes across the (NANP). This ensured seamless number transfers for wireless subscribers in the region, supporting the growing mobile user base in areas like Las Cruces. Additionally, the nationwide shift to mandatory 10-digit dialing in the 2020s, driven by the introduction of the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline in 2021, had minimal specific impact on 575 beyond reinforcing its original 2007 requirement for 10-digit local calls to distinguish it from area code 505. To address localized growth pressures, carriers in high-demand pockets such as Las Cruces have implemented number conservation measures, including rate center consolidation and enhanced thousands-block pooling, as part of broader NANPA-guided efforts to extend the code's viability without structural changes. These initiatives, ongoing since the mid-2010s, prioritize efficient allocation in urbanizing areas while maintaining the code's overall stability.

Service Area

Geographic Coverage

Area code 575 encompasses primarily the southeastern and southwestern portions of , serving a predominantly rural and semi-rural expanse that includes significant parts of the , the Sacramento Mountains, and the Permian Basin. The boundaries of this area code generally begin just south of Albuquerque and extend eastward to the border with and southward to the border with , while excluding the more densely populated north-central regions of the state. This configuration resulted from the 2007 split of , designed to allocate numbers based on geographic demand outside the urban north. The region features diverse topographical elements, including arid plains, rugged mountain ranges, and fertile river valleys along the Rio Grande. These landscapes contribute to a varied environment shaped by semi-arid climates and elevation changes from desert basins to peaks exceeding 10,000 feet in the Sacramento Mountains. The area code's territory aligns with historical state divisions tied to southeastern New Mexico's agricultural heritage, including pecan orchards and dairy farming along the Rio Grande Valley, as well as its oil and natural gas production in the Permian Basin, which drives much of the region's economic activity.

Major Cities and Counties

Area code 575 serves several key urban centers in , with Las Cruces being the largest city, home to approximately 118,000 residents as of 2025 and serving as the economic and educational hub of the southern region through institutions like . Other major cities include Roswell with about 47,000 inhabitants, known for its agricultural processing and related to UFO lore; Hobbs, population around 41,000, a center for oilfield services; Clovis, with roughly 37,000 residents, supporting a diverse economy in retail and education; Carlsbad, approximately 32,000 people, anchored by mining and to Carlsbad Caverns; and Alamogordo, near 32,000, boosted by proximity to and . Notable smaller communities within the area code include Portales, a regional education center with ; Artesia, focused on oil production; Silver City, a mining and arts destination; Deming, supporting and border trade; and , known for its hot springs and tourism. The area code encompasses 27 counties, covering a diverse array of rural and semi-urban areas with populations ranging from under 5,000 in remote counties like Hidalgo to over 200,000 in more populous ones such as Doña Ana County (approximately 229,000 residents). Key counties include Doña Ana, the most populous in the overlay with significant urban development; Chaves (about 64,000), a leader in dairy and crop production; Lea (around 76,000), driven by energy extraction; (around 47,000), home to ; Eddy (approximately 61,000), prominent in oil and gas; Otero (near 70,000), featuring military testing facilities; Grant (about 28,000), with heritage; Luna (around 26,000), involved in international trade; Sierra (roughly 11,000), centered on ranching; and Hidalgo (under 5,000), characterized by sparse borderlands population. The remaining counties, such as Catron, Colfax, De Baca, Guadalupe, Harding, Lincoln, Quay, Roosevelt, Socorro, and Torrance, generally have populations between 5,000 and 20,000, supporting and small-scale tourism. This service area is home to roughly 800,000 residents, representing about 38% of New Mexico's total population of approximately 2.1 million in 2025, with a demographic mix featuring a large majority (over 50% in many counties), significant Native American communities (around 10-15% regionally, including tribes like the Mescalero ), and Anglo populations concentrated in rural and military-adjacent areas. Economically, the region relies on agriculture in the Pecos Valley, particularly in Chaves and Eddy counties, where dairy, pecans, and chilies contribute 16% of the state's agricultural output. Oil and gas extraction in the Permian Basin, dominated by Lea and Eddy counties, accounts for 29% of the basin's U.S. production growth, fueling local employment and state revenues. Military installations, notably White Sands Missile Range spanning Doña Ana and Otero counties, generate an estimated $4.7 million in daily economic impact through testing activities and support over 5,600 jobs.

Technical Details

Dialing and Numbering

Area code 575 operates within the (NANP), requiring all telephone numbers to follow the standard 10-digit format of NPA-NXX-XXXX, where NPA is the three-digit area code (575), NXX is the central office code, and XXXX is the line number. Since October 24, 2021, mandatory 10-digit dialing has been required for all local calls within the 575 area code to accommodate the nationwide implementation of the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, preventing conflicts with legacy 7-digit dialing. Local calling areas in area code 575 are defined by individual carriers and rate centers, allowing toll-free calls for intra-575 connections, such as between Las Cruces and Roswell, depending on the subscriber's plan. Calls between area code 575 and the adjacent 505 typically require 1+10-digit dialing and are treated as long-distance toll calls, though some bundled service plans may include them as local. Under the NANP, each central office code (NXX) in 575 supports up to 10,000 subscriber numbers (0000-9999, excluding reserved blocks), with approximately 518 active NXX codes assigned as of recent records, enabling capacity for millions of lines across the region. Special services in area code 575 align with NANP standards, including support for toll-free numbers (e.g., , 888 series) that route nationwide without additional charges, emergency routing for location-based dispatch, and for wireless and wireline numbers within 575 boundaries. The area is primarily served by major carriers such as CenturyLink (formerly ), AT&T, and Verizon Wireless, operating standard NANP rate centers without unique deviations from the national framework.

Time Zone and Overlaps

Area code 575 encompasses the southeastern and southwestern portions of , operating entirely within the Mountain Time Zone (MT). This zone corresponds to UTC-7 during and UTC-6 during . The region observes , advancing clocks to Mountain Daylight Time (MDT) on the second Sunday in March and reverting to Mountain Standard Time (MST) on the first Sunday in November. Unlike certain split area codes that straddle multiple time zones—such as those in expansive states like —the full service area of 575 maintains uniform adherence to MT, ensuring consistent temporal alignment across its coverage. Geographically, area code 575 adjoins several neighboring codes along New Mexico's borders, including 505 to the north (also MT), 915 in southwestern (MT for the El Paso region), and 432 in eastern (Central Time). There are no internal time zone divisions within 575 itself. This configuration simplifies intrastate calling within 575, as all locations share the same without restrictions based on temporal differences. However, callers to adjacent regions must account for potential offsets, such as the one-hour difference when dialing into 432-area code territories during . For instance, calls to El Paso in the 915 area code align seamlessly with 575's MT.

References

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