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Area code 773

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The numbering plan areas of Illinois

Area code 773 is a telephone area code in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) in the U.S. state of Illinois. It serves the outer areas of Chicago, outside the Loop and the innermost neighborhoods.

Originally, all of Chicago and its suburbs used area code 312. In 1989, area code 708 was created for the suburbs, leaving the city in area code 312.

By the mid-1990s, Chicago's continued growth and the proliferation of cell phones and pagers made it apparent that the city needed a new area code. It was decided to split off all of the city outside the downtown area as 773. The new area code went into effect on October 12, 1996. Permissive dialing of 312 continued across Chicago until January 11, 1997.[1][2] On August 10, 2007, the Illinois Commerce Commission announced that area code 872 would overlay area codes 312 and 773; it went into service on November 7, 2009.

The Illinois side of the Chicago area–312/773/872, 708, 847/224, 630/331 and portions of 815/779–is one of the largest local calling areas in the United States; with few exceptions, no long-distance charges are applied from one portion of the metro area to another.[3]

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from Grokipedia
Area code 773 is a telephone area code within the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) serving most of the city of Chicago, Illinois, excluding the central downtown Loop district, along with portions of surrounding suburbs in Cook County.[1] It encompasses neighborhoods north, west, and south of the Loop, including O'Hare International Airport and Midway International Airport.[2] Established to address the impending exhaustion of telephone numbers in the original Chicago area code, 773 was introduced on October 12, 1996, as a geographic split from area code 312, which retained coverage of the central business district.[3][1] A permissive dialing period allowed calls to the new 773 territory to be completed using either the 312 or 773 prefix until mandatory 10-digit dialing took effect on January 11, 1997.[1] In response to sustained demand for numbering resources, area code 872 was implemented as an all-services overlay on both 312 and 773 beginning November 7, 2009, expanding the total numbering capacity while maintaining the same geographic footprint.[4][2] This overlay serves the combined service area, which includes 23 municipalities such as Cicero, Evanston, Arlington Heights, Des Plaines, and Oak Park, primarily within Cook County.[5] The region operates in the Central Time Zone.[3]

History

Creation and Implementation

Area code 312 was one of the original 86 numbering plan areas established in 1947 under the North American Numbering Plan (NANP), assigned specifically to serve Chicago and its immediate suburbs due to the city's high population density and telephone demand.[6][7] Initially covering a broad region including much of northeastern Illinois, the code faced progressive boundary adjustments, such as the 1989 creation of area code 708 for suburban expansion, which refocused 312 on the city proper. By the mid-1990s, however, rapid population growth, business expansion, and increasing telephone subscriptions in Chicago led to the exhaustion of available numbers within the 312 code, prompting the need for relief measures.[8] In September 1995, Ameritech, the primary telephone service provider for the region, proposed a geographic split of the 312 area code to the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) and the NANP Administration to address the impending shortage. The proposal outlined retaining 312 for the central business district, including the Loop and adjacent neighborhoods, while assigning the new code 773 to the outer portions of Chicago. The ICC approved this plan later that year, with the NANP Administration issuing a formal implementation notice in February 1996, confirming the split as a targeted solution to conserve numbering resources without an immediate overlay.[8][1] The new area code 773 entered service on October 12, 1996, with initial allocations assigning central office prefixes to telephone exchanges in Chicago's northern, western, and southern neighborhoods, excluding the preserved central core under 312. A permissive dialing period allowed both 7-digit and 10-digit local calls until January 11, 1997, after which mandatory 10-digit dialing (area code plus 7-digit number) was required for all local calls within the affected regions to distinguish between the split codes. Ameritech launched public education campaigns through mailings, bill inserts, media announcements, and community outreach to inform residents and businesses of the changes, emphasizing the need to update phone listings and directories.[3][9][1] The transition encountered challenges, including resident confusion over which neighborhoods retained 312 versus those switching to 773, as well as opposition to the split due to the inconvenience of number changes for millions of users outside the central district. The geographic boundary, drawn along major streets like Fullerton Avenue and Roosevelt Road, led to some inconsistencies in adjacent areas, exacerbating dialing errors during the initial months. Despite these issues, the split successfully extended the lifespan of available numbers in the Chicago region.[10][11]

Introduction of Overlay Codes

By the mid-2000s, the sustained growth in Chicago's telecommunications infrastructure and subscriber base had led to the projected exhaustion of available central office codes in area code 773, with forecasts indicating depletion as early as 2009 if unaddressed.[2] This recognition by regulators highlighted the need for additional numbering resources to support ongoing demand from residential, business, and mobile services in the region. To mitigate this shortage, the North American Numbering Plan Administrator (NANPA) and the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) coordinated the allocation of area code 872 as an all-services overlay covering the entire service areas of both 312 and 773.[2] The overlay entered service on November 7, 2009, marking the first such addition to the Chicago metropolitan numbering plan since the 1996 geographic split that created 773 from 312.[4] Implementation required a transition to mandatory 10-digit local dialing across the overlaid region to accommodate multiple area codes in the same geographic space.[12] The introduction of 872 had minimal disruption for existing users, who retained their original 312 or 773 numbers without changes to service or billing.[13] New telephone assignments prioritized 872 to preserve remaining inventory in the legacy codes, ensuring equitable distribution while avoiding rate center redefinitions, as the overlay maintained the existing boundaries.[2] As of 2025, the combined 312/773/872 numbering plan area remains under active monitoring by NANPA, with projections estimating exhaustion in the third quarter of 2043 based on current assignment rates; no further overlays have been announced, though future relief planning would follow similar regulatory processes if demand accelerates.[14]

Geography and Coverage

Primary Service Areas

Area code 773 serves the outer portions of Chicago, covering expansive neighborhoods across the city's North Side, West Side, and South Side, while the central downtown Loop remains under area code 312.[3] Key North Side areas include Rogers Park and Uptown, known for their cultural vibrancy and residential density.[15] On the West Side, it encompasses Humboldt Park, a hub for community arts and green spaces. The South Side coverage includes Hyde Park, home to educational institutions and historic architecture. Beyond Chicago proper, the area code serves portions of suburbs such as Evanston, Oak Park, Cicero, and Berwyn, with partial extensions into Skokie and Lincolnwood.[5] These suburbs provide a mix of residential, commercial, and educational environments adjacent to the urban core.[3] Geographically, 773 primarily operates within Cook County, with extensions into portions of DuPage, Kane, and Will counties.[5] This positioning supports connectivity across Chicago's metropolitan fringe, including O'Hare International Airport and Midway International Airport.[2] As of 2025 estimates, the area code serves a population of approximately 3.3 million residents.[16] Demographically, the covered regions highlight Chicago's diversity, with significant immigrant communities from Latin America, Asia, and Eastern Europe, alongside established African American populations in West and South Side neighborhoods.[17] Economically, these areas feature industrial zones, particularly along the West and South Sides, fostering manufacturing, logistics, and small-scale production that bolster the city's workforce.[18]

Boundaries and Exclusions

Area code 773 covers the majority of the City of Chicago, excluding the central business district (the Loop) and surrounding inner neighborhoods, including the Near North Side areas such as Streeterville and the Gold Coast, as well as portions of the Near West Side. This configuration resulted from a 1996 geographic split of the original 312 area code, designed to conserve available numbers while retaining 312 exclusively for the downtown core to maintain its established prestige among businesses and residents. The boundaries were drawn roughly along North Avenue to the north, Western Avenue to the west, and 35th Street to the south for the retained 312 territory. Geographically, 773 forms a ring encircling the compact 312 zone, encompassing outer Chicago neighborhoods and sharing identical boundaries with its overlay code 872, which was introduced in 2009 to address ongoing number shortages without altering the service area. Unlike splits that redefine territories, the full overlay with 872 applies the same coverage limits to both codes, ensuring no distinct exclusions or inclusions for the newer code. The 773 region borders area code 312 centrally within Chicago, while its outer edges adjoin suburban numbering plan areas, including 630 and its overlay 331 to the west (covering areas like Aurora and western DuPage County), 708 and 464 to the south (encompassing southern suburbs such as Oak Lawn), and 847 and 224 to the north (serving northern suburbs like Evanston). This positioning reflects Chicago's urban-suburban layout, with 773 handling a larger land area than 312 despite comparable population densities in the city's densely populated zones.

Technical and Operational Details

Numbering Plan and Prefixes

Area code 773 encompasses approximately 785 active central office codes (NXX), assigned from 773-200 through 773-999, excluding reserved ranges such as those for future use or administrative purposes.[19] These codes form the basis for the seven-digit local telephone numbers within the area, with each NXX representing a block of 10,000 possible numbers managed under the North American Numbering Plan (NANP). Multiple rate centers operate within area code 773, defining local calling areas for billing and routing purposes. Examples include CHICAGO ZONE 3 (associated with prefixes like 773-202 and 773-427), CHICAGO ZONE 1-Wabash (linked to prefixes such as 773-203), and other zones like CHICAGO ZONE 6, each serving specific neighborhoods or districts in the coverage area.[20] These rate centers facilitate intra-area calling without additional charges, while inter-rate center calls may incur tolls based on carrier tariffs.[21] Number assignment in area code 773 follows NANP guidelines, with initial allocations post-1996 split from the original 312 area code directing new numbers to 773 for outer Chicago areas.[1] Following the introduction of overlay code 872 in 2009 due to resource exhaustion, subsequent assignments prioritized 872 for new numbers across the shared territory, while 773 prefixes remain non-geographically split within their blocks to support flexible distribution.[13] The numbering plan for 773 is overseen by the North American Numbering Plan Administrator (NANPA), which handles national code allocation and conservation, in coordination with the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) for state-specific approvals and consumer protections. The ICC conducts periodic audits to monitor exhaustion and ensure equitable distribution, as seen in its 2007 approval of the 872 overlay. NANPA performs ongoing reviews of central office code utilization to prevent depletion. According to the latest NANPA projections as of April 2025, the combined 312/773/872 area code is expected to exhaust central office codes in the third quarter of 2040.[14][22] Prefixes within 773 are allocated across various service types, including traditional wireline, wireless carriers (e.g., T-Mobile USA), and Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) providers (e.g., Bandwidth.com and [Level 3 Communications](/page/Level 3 Communications)).[23] Paging services also receive dedicated blocks, though less commonly in recent years. As of 2025, number portability remains fully supported under FCC mandates, allowing seamless transfers between wireline, wireless, and VoIP services without changing the 773 prefix, with no major regulatory changes reported this year.[24]

Time Zone and Usage

Area code 773 operates within the Central Time Zone, encompassing the America/Chicago time standard, which observes UTC-6 hours during Central Standard Time (CST) and advances to UTC-5 hours during Central Daylight Time (CDT) from the second Sunday in March to the first Sunday in November. This alignment ensures synchronization with the broader Chicago metropolitan region, facilitating consistent scheduling for communications and services across the covered areas.[3] In terms of usage, area code 773 supports a mix of wireline, wireless, and Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) telephone services, primarily wireline with significant wireless and VoIP usage, as reported in federal data.[25] The code's implementation as part of the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) accommodates high demand in urban settings, where numbers are assigned through pooled blocks managed by the North American Numbering Plan Administration (NANPA). It primarily serves residential, business, and mobile users in Chicago's outer neighborhoods, excluding the central business district covered by 312.[25] Due to the 2009 overlay with area code 872, which shares the same geographic footprint, mandatory ten-digit dialing (area code plus seven-digit number) is required for all local calls within the 773/872 service area, even when calling within the same prefix. This procedure was required since the 2009 overlay, preventing routing errors and supporting efficient number conservation, while long-distance calls prepend the "1" country code. Emergency dialing remains unchanged at 911, and non-emergency services like 311 continue as three digits.[26][13]
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