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Area code 650
Area code 650
from Wikipedia
458/541775702928442/760916/279530369/707209559831805661858909951619213323369/707916/279415650341/510925408209831805661442/760310/424747/818626909951949562657/714
Numbering plan areas in California (blue) and border states. Area code 650 is shown in red.

Area code 650 is a telephone area code in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) for the San Francisco Bay Area in the U.S. state of California. It was split from area code 415 on August 2, 1997, and includes most of San Mateo County (except the northernmost portion), part of San Francisco, and the northwestern portion of Santa Clara County including Palo Alto, Mountain View, and Los Altos.

Prior to October 2021, area code 650 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.[1]

Service area

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San Mateo County

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Santa Clara County

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San Francisco County

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Area code 650 is a telephone area code in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) serving the San Francisco Peninsula region of California, United States. It primarily encompasses San Mateo County and the northern portions of Santa Clara County, including Mountain View, as part of the San Francisco and San Jose metropolitan statistical areas. The area code serves a population of approximately 1.6 million people (2020 census), operating within the Pacific Time Zone. Established on August 2, 1997, area code 650 was created as a split from area code 415 to meet the surging demand for telephone numbers amid the region's economic and population growth. Key cities served include Palo Alto, Mountain View, Redwood City, San Mateo, South San Francisco, Burlingame, and Menlo Park. Unlike many urban area codes, 650 has no overlay, though the California Public Utilities Commission approved but later suspended an overlay plan in 1999 due to sufficient number availability at the time. The 650 region is a central hub of , home to major technology firms, , and innovation ecosystems that have shaped the global tech industry. This area hosts landmarks such as in Palo Alto and the in Mountain View, contributing to its status as a powerhouse for software, hardware, and development. As of April 2025, the area code is projected to exhaust in the third quarter of 2029, supporting high-density needs without immediate exhaustion.

History

Creation and split from 415

The area code 415, established in 1947 to serve much of including the , underwent multiple splits in prior decades to address growing demand, but by the mid-1990s, the remaining portion—encompassing , the Peninsula, and parts of Marin County—faced severe number exhaustion. This crisis stemmed from rapid , the proliferation of machines, pagers, cellular phones, and emerging services, which accelerated the consumption of available telephone numbers in the region. The Administration (NANPA) projected that the 415 area code would exhaust its central office codes by late without intervention, prompting urgent relief measures. In response, the (CPUC) initiated planning in early 1996, collaborating with and telecommunications carriers to design a geographic split that would preserve the existing 415 numbering for and Marin County while reallocating resources southward. The CPUC formally approved the creation of area code 650 on August 16, 1996, designating it for the and northern Santa Clara County to relieve the overburdened 415. issued Planning Letter 022 on November 22, 1996, detailing the split configuration, including a map of the new boundaries and lists of assigned NXX (central office) codes to be transferred. The split took effect at 12:01 a.m. on August 2, 1997, reassigning exchanges such as those serving San Mateo (e.g., 344, 345), Redwood City (e.g., 369), and Palo Alto (e.g., 321, 324) from 415 to 650, while retaining others like those in San Francisco proper under 415. To ease the transition, the CPUC and carriers launched public notification campaigns starting in spring 1997, including mailings, advertisements, and community workshops to inform residents and businesses of the change. A permissive dialing period followed the effective date, allowing calls to the new 650 territory to be completed using either the 415 or 650 prefix until mandatory 650 dialing began on February 1, 1998.

Early implementation and growth

The implementation of area code 650 followed its creation as a geographic split from area code 415, effective August 2, 1997, to relieve the exhaustion pressures on the parent code serving the . A six-month permissive dialing period allowed callers to reach numbers in the new 650 territory using either the 415 or 650 prefix, facilitating a smooth transition for residents and businesses. This period ended on February 1, 1998, when mandatory dialing of 650 became required for all local calls within the area, while remained standard until later national changes. The rollout was managed by the (CPUC) in coordination with telephone carriers, ensuring minimal disruption despite the scale of the split affecting over a million lines. Initial allocation of central office codes was geographically targeted to support the region's communities, with examples including 344 assigned to San Mateo and 355 to Pacifica, reflecting the split's focus on San Mateo County and northern Santa Clara County. These prefixes were distributed through carrier requests and lotteries overseen by the , prioritizing established rate centers to maintain local calling patterns. Early adoption was swift, as the split provided immediate relief to 415 by carving out dedicated numbering resources for the growing suburbs. However, some initial challenges arose, including caller confusion over shifting boundaries between 415 and 650, particularly in overlapping rate centers near Daly City and South San Francisco, which required minor adjustments to clarify service areas and prevent misrouted calls. Due to rapid growth fueled by the Silicon Valley tech boom in the late 1990s and 2000s, which spurred demand for telephone numbers amid the dot-com expansion, the influx of startups, telecommunications competitors, and high-tech workers in cities like Palo Alto and Mountain View accelerated number assignments. Carriers assigned prefixes faster than anticipated, leading to projected exhaustion by 2001, just four years after launch. In April 1999, the CPUC approved an overlay with new area code 524 to address this, but suspended the plan later that year after implementing number conservation measures that extended availability. At creation in 1997, the area served an estimated population of around 900,000, encompassing most of San Mateo County's 697,000 residents and portions of northern Santa Clara County; by 2010, this had risen to approximately 1.17 million due to suburban expansion and immigration tied to the tech sector. This growth highlighted the split's success in sustaining connectivity during a period of unprecedented economic transformation, though it also underscored the need for ongoing numbering efficiency measures.

Service Area

San Mateo County

Area code 650 provides full coverage of central and southern San Mateo County, excluding the far northern areas that remained in area code 415. The specific boundaries extend from the San Francisco County line southward to San Gregorio, encompassing the Half Moon Bay coastline and surrounding coastal communities. This region includes a mix of urban, suburban, and rural landscapes along the . Major cities served by area code 650 within San Mateo County include San Mateo, Redwood City (the ), Daly City, South San Francisco, San Bruno, Millbrae, Burlingame, Hillsborough, San Carlos, Belmont, Foster City, and Atherton. Smaller communities such as Pacifica, Half Moon Bay, and San Gregorio also fall under this coverage, contributing to the area's diverse residential and commercial fabric. The population within San Mateo County's portion served by area code 650 is approximately 743,000 residents (as of 2020), reflecting diverse suburban communities with significant coastal influences and a blend of professional, tech-oriented, and family demographics. Notable landmarks and rate centers include the Mills-Peninsula Medical Center in Burlingame, a key healthcare facility with phone numbers in the 650 prefix. The adjacency to further influences local numbering patterns due to cross-county economic ties. Additionally, area code 650 overlaps with Santa Clara County in shared economic zones like .

Santa Clara County

Area code 650 provides telephone service to the extreme northwestern portion of , encompassing the Midpeninsula region adjacent to San Mateo County. This partial coverage, limited to areas north of Sunnyvale, was created on August 2, 1997, through a split from area code 415 to accommodate rapid growth in the . Southern parts of the county, including major cities like San Jose and Cupertino, fall under instead. The service area includes the cities of Palo Alto, Mountain View, Los Altos, and Los Altos Hills, along with the unincorporated Stanford community and the western edges of Sunnyvale; portions of Menlo Park near the county line are also covered, though most of that city lies in San Mateo County. These boundaries generally run from the San Mateo County line southward through the northern tech corridor, stopping short of central Santa Clara County. The region serves a of approximately 210,000 residents across these locales, according to 2020 U.S. Census figures (Palo Alto: 68,572; Mountain View: 82,376; Los Altos: 31,625; Los Altos Hills: 8,489; Stanford CDP: 21,078). This tech-centric zone is a core part of , where the economy revolves around innovation and higher education, profoundly shaping local telecommunications needs. Prominent institutions and companies, such as in Palo Alto and Google's headquarters in Mountain View, drive a dense concentration of businesses and professionals, fostering high demand for local phone numbers, including vanity options that reflect corporate branding. Key rate centers supporting this area are Palo Alto and Stanford (the latter tied to the Palo Alto exchange), which handle the bulk of calls amid the region's entrepreneurial ecosystem.

Technical and Administrative Details

Time zone and dialing procedures

Area code 650 operates entirely within the , which observes Pacific Standard Time (PST) during standard time (UTC-8) and Pacific Daylight Time (PDT) during daylight saving time (UTC-7). This alignment applies uniformly across the service area in , ensuring consistent time observance for all local calls and services. Prior to 2021, standard was used for local calls within area code 650. However, on October 24, 2021, mandatory (area code 650 plus the seven-digit telephone number) was implemented for all local calls, following a permissive period that began earlier in the year. This change was mandated by the (FCC) to accommodate the nationwide rollout of the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, preventing conflicts with existing seven-digit numbers beginning with 988. Intra-area code 650 calls remain classified as local and are not subject to long-distance charges when dialed with ten digits, while calls to adjacent area codes such as 415 () or 408 () have long required ten-digit dialing and may incur toll fees depending on the carrier and specific rate center boundaries. Emergency dialing procedures remain unaffected by the ten-digit requirement: 911 continues to be dialed as three digits for immediate access to emergency services without the area code. Similarly, is now accessible as a three-digit code nationwide, routing directly to and Crisis Lifeline without needing the area code, text, or chat options. For billing and routing purposes, area code 650 encompasses multiple rate centers, including San Mateo, Palo Alto, Redwood City, and South , among others, which define local calling scopes and potential toll boundaries between exchanges.

Numbering resources and future plans

As of October 2025, area code 650 has a projected exhaustion date of the third quarter of 2029, reflecting moderate risk from sustained demand in the technology sector but no immediate crisis. This projection accounts for reduced historical and forecasted demand compared to prior years, with the exhaust timeline extended by two quarters from late 2024 estimates. The area's high utilization—driven by Silicon Valley's population and business growth—has led to over 200 central office codes being assigned, supporting millions of active numbers across the region. Administration of numbering resources in area code 650 falls under the (CPUC), which collaborates with the Administrator () to manage allocations. Key conservation measures include thousands-block number pooling, where carriers donate unused 1,000-number blocks to a central pool for redistribution, helping to extend the lifespan of existing codes amid growing demand. The Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) rule, designating the three-digit code for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, has implications for 650 by reserving the 988 central office code and mandating 10-digit local dialing since 2021, slightly constraining available resources but ensuring crisis call routing without conflict. Looking ahead, no overlays or splits have been approved for area code 650 through 2030, with CPUC and continuing to monitor Silicon Valley's expansion for potential relief if projections shift earlier than 2028. The code's association with prestigious tech hubs has made it desirable for vanity numbers, enhancing its value in professional contexts.

References

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