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Area code 872
Area code 872
from Wikipedia
All NPAs within Illinois

Area code 872 is a telephone area code in the North American Numbering Plan for Chicago in the U.S. state of Illinois. It is an overlay code for a numbering plan area that comprises those of area codes 312 and 773. The overlay commenced service on November 7, 2009.[1] It is the third overlay area code in the region and the tenth area code to serve northeast Illinois.[1]

As early as 1998, the North American Numbering Plan Administration had recommended a third area code for Chicago, estimating that 312 and 773 would both be exhausted by 2001. However, the Illinois Commerce Commission implemented a series of conservation measures that staved off the need for a new area code. By 2008, a combination of population growth and a large growth in cell phone usage forced the implementation of 872.[1]

With the implementation of 872, all local calls in Chicago must be dialed with the full 11-digit phone number (10 digits from cell phones).[1]

The Illinois side of the Chicago area–312/773/872, 708/464, 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.[2]

See also

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References

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from Grokipedia
Area code 872 is a area code within the (NANP) that serves the city of , , primarily covering the urban core and immediate surrounding areas in Cook County. It functions as an overlay for the established area codes 312 and 773, which together encompass the same geographic region, including central (312) and the city's outer neighborhoods and select suburbs (773). Introduced on November 7, 2009, the 872 code was created to provide additional numbering resources amid projected exhaustion of available numbers in the high-demand Chicago market, without requiring changes to existing phone numbers. The implementation of area code 872 mandated a shift to 11-digit local dialing (1 + area code + seven-digit number) for all calls within the overlaid region, effective from the same date, to accommodate the multiple area codes serving the same locality; previously, sufficed in many cases. New telephone service in is now assigned numbers from the 872 code, while legacy 312 and 773 numbers continue in use, ensuring a seamless transition for residents and businesses. This overlay structure has no impact on emergency services like 911 or 311, long-distance calling rates, or usage, though it necessitated updates to automated dialing systems, machines, and contact lists. Since its activation, area code 872 has supported Chicago's role as a major economic and cultural hub, facilitating communication for approximately 2.7 million residents (2025 est.) and numerous businesses in a densely populated area spanning approximately 228 square miles. The code's prefixes range from 872-200 to 872-999, with ongoing assignments managed by the Administration () to sustain growth. All calls within the 872, 312, and 773 serving area operate in the , reflecting Chicago's location.

History

Creation

The creation of area code 872 was necessitated by the rapid depletion of available central office codes (NXX codes) in Chicago's existing area codes 312 and 773, driven by , increased demand for and numbers, and the expansion of services following the 1996 Telecommunications Act. In June 2009, the Administrator () issued Planning Letter 390, forecasting that the 773 numbering plan area (NPA) would exhaust between the second and fourth quarters of 2009, prompting urgent measures to prevent service disruptions. The Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC), in coordination with NANPA, announced the overlay relief plan on August 10, 2009, selecting 872 as the new all-services distributed overlay code to serve the same geographic region as 312 and 773 without requiring customers to change existing numbers. This selection followed industry consultations and analysis of available NXX codes within the North American Numbering Plan (NANP), ensuring equitable distribution of new numbers among wireline, wireless, and other service providers. The regulatory approval process was governed by the (FCC) under NANP guidelines, building on the ICC's earlier 1999 approval of an overlay mechanism for the 312 NPA in Docket No. 98-0847, which was adapted to encompass both 312 and 773 due to the accelerated exhaustion timeline. Public input was incorporated through stakeholder meetings and notifications, aligning with FCC-mandated procedures for numbering resource optimization to balance consumer impact with supply needs.

Implementation

The implementation of area code 872 followed the Illinois Commerce Commission's 1999 approval of the overlay plan as relief for the 312 and 773 numbering plan areas. The first central office codes (NXX prefixes) in 872 were assigned on August 7, 2009, coinciding with the start of a 90-day permissive dialing period during which local calls could be placed using either 7-digit or 10-digit formats. Full activation occurred on November 7, 2009, marking the end of permissive dialing and the enforcement of mandatory 10-digit local dialing across the region. New telephone numbers were issued with the 872 area code beginning August 2009, allocated solely to the existing geographic footprint of the 312 and 773 codes without altering customer locations or requiring number changes for current subscribers. Existing 312 and 773 numbers continued in use unchanged, ensuring no disruption to established services. To facilitate the transition, the Illinois Commerce Commission coordinated public education campaigns with telephone carriers, mandating notifications to customers at least 90 days prior to mandatory dialing through methods such as bill inserts, direct mailings, and website postings. These efforts included widespread media announcements via print, broadcast, and online channels to familiarize the public with 10-digit dialing requirements. The overlay required operational upgrades to central office switches throughout the Chicago rate center to accommodate multiple area codes serving the same , enabling seamless routing of calls under the new 10-digit plan without implementing geographic splits or rate center changes. Carriers conducted testing and switch reprogramming in advance to support this distributed overlay structure.

Coverage

Geographic scope

Area code 872 serves the central portion of the in northeastern , primarily encompassing the city of and its immediate suburbs within Cook County. This includes key neighborhoods such as the Loop, Near North Side, Near South Side, , Hyde Park, and much of the South Side, along with adjacent communities like Oak Park, Elmwood Park, Riverdale, Harwood Heights, , Evanston, and Skokie. The coverage is limited to Cook County and excludes far western suburbs served by area code 630 and southern suburbs covered by 708, focusing instead on the urban core and inner-ring areas. The total land area served by area code 872 is approximately 250 square miles, forming a compact urban and suburban footprint within the broader . This region operates entirely within the (UTC-6 standard time, UTC-5 ), with no division across time zones. As an all-services overlay for area codes 312 and 773, area code 872 shares the identical geographic boundaries without altering the established territorial scope.

Overlaid area codes

Area code 872 serves as an overlay for area codes 312 and 773, covering the same geographic territory in , , without any boundary splits between the codes. This overlay complex ensures that all three codes are interchangeable within the region, requiring 10-digit dialing for local calls between them to distinguish the specific area code. Area code 312 was established in 1947 as one of the original 86 numbering plan areas under the , initially serving the entire , including the . Due to population growth and increasing demand for telephone numbers, this single-code system evolved; in 1996, area code 773 was introduced as a geographic split from 312, with 773 assigned to the outer neighborhoods of Chicago while 312 retained the downtown core. The addition of 872 in 2009 specifically relieved the exhaustion of numbering resources in both 312 and 773, introducing approximately 6 million new numbers to the shared pool and extending the usability of the overlay complex. As of April 2025, projections indicate that the combined 312/773/872 area will not face exhaustion until the third quarter of 2043, averting the need for additional overlays in the near term.

Dialing and usage

Local procedures

In the overlay region served by area codes 312, 773, and 872, all local calls must include the full area code followed by the seven-digit telephone number, resulting in mandatory 10-digit dialing for cellular and VoIP services. This requirement took effect on November 7, 2009, with the introduction of the 872 overlay, eliminating the previous option of seven-digit dialing even for calls within the same area code. For landline services, an additional leading "1" is required, making it an 11-digit format (1 + area code + seven digits) to complete local calls. Calls between any combination of 312, 773, or 872 numbers within the Chicago overlay are classified as local calls, with no geographic distinctions or additional charges applied based on differing area codes. This uniform treatment ensures that intra-region communication remains toll-free, regardless of the specific area code used by the calling or called party. Emergency services, such as 911, can be accessed by dialing just the three digits without any area code or leading "1," maintaining unchanged access across all phone types in the region. Non-emergency municipal lines, like Chicago's 311 service for city information, also follow the three-digit format and do not require the full 10- or 11-digit dialing. Since the 2009 implementation, major landline and mobile carriers operating in Illinois, including AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile, have uniformly supported these dialing procedures across their networks, with no significant carrier-specific variations reported for the 312/773/872 overlay.

Long-distance access

To place a long-distance call to area code 872 from within the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) but outside Illinois, callers must dial 1 followed by the area code and the seven-digit telephone number, such as 1-872-XXX-XXXX. This format also applies when calling from within Illinois but to a different rate center, ensuring consistent routing across NANP regions. For international callers reaching area code 872, the NANP's of 1 is prefixed after the originating country's international exit code, followed by 872 and the seven-digit number, resulting in formats like +1 872 XXX XXXX. This structure facilitates direct dialing to NANP destinations, including overlays like 872, without additional modifications. Toll-free numbers in the , 888, and similar series can route to lines assigned within area code 872 as part of standard NANP operations, requiring no special dialing or handling beyond the usual 1--XXX-XXXX format. Such routing is geographically flexible across the NANP, allowing seamless connectivity to Chicago-based services. Calls to area code 872 are subject to standard U.S. long-distance rates, with no additional surcharges imposed due to its overlay status on 312 and 773. Rate plans from carriers typically treat these as conventional interstate or intrastate toll calls, varying by provider and distance.
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