Telephone numbers in India
Location | |
---|---|
Country | India |
Continent | Asia |
Type | open |
Access codes | |
Country calling code | +91 |
International call prefix | 00 |
Trunk prefix | 0 |
List of India dialing codes |
Fixed (landline) numbers
Subscriber Trunk Dialling (STD) codes are assigned to each city/town/village, with the larger Metro cities having shorter area codes (STD codes), which are from 2 to 8 digits long. For example,
- 11 - New Delhi, Delhi
- 22 - Mumbai, Maharashtra
- 33 - Kolkata, West Bengal
- 44 - Chennai, Tamil Nadu
- 20 - Pune, Maharashtra
- 40 - Hyderabad, Telangana
- 79 - Ahmedabad, Gujarat
- 80 - Bangalore, Karnataka
Tier-2 Cities in India have STD code with 3 digits. For example,
- 120 - Ghaziabad/Noida, Uttar Pradesh
- 135 - Dehradun, Uttarakhand
- 141 - Jaipur, Rajasthan
- 161 - Ludhiana, Punjab
- 175 - Patiala, Punjab
- 181 - Jalandhar, Punjab
- 231 - Kolhapur, Maharashtra
- 240 - Aurangabad, Maharashtra
- 484 - Kochi, Kerala
- 551 - Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh
- 562 - Agra, Uttar Pradesh
- 581 - Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh
- 591 - Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh
- 612 - Patna, Bihar
- 641 - Bhagalpur, Bihar
- 657 - Jamshedpur, Jharkhand
- 870 - Warangal, Telangana
Kanpur and Lucknow were the two cities between which the first STD call of the country was made.
The total length of all phone numbers (STD code and the phone number) in India is constant at 10 digits, for example 7513200000 signifies a STD code i.e. 751 Gwalior & the phone number 3200000.
Land line numbers are at most 8 digits long (usually in major metros).
Due to the availability of multiple operators offering fixed line services (either over wire or wireless), there is an operator-code for each telephone number, which is the first digit in the phone number. These are[1]
- BSNL - Numbers start with a '2'
- MTNL - Numbers start with a '2'
- Reliance Communications - Numbers start with a '3'
- Bharti Airtel - Numbers start with a '4'
- MTS India - Numbers start with a '5'
- Datacom Solutions - Numbers start with a '6'
- Tata Indicom - Numbers start with a '7'
Thus, a number formatted as 020-30303030 means a fixed-line Reliance number in Pune, while 011-20000198 is an MTNL fixed line in Delhi and 033-45229320 is a fixed-line Airtel number in Kolkata, and 07582-221434 is a BSNL number from Sagar, Madhya Pradesh.
No prefix is required to call from one landline to another in the same STD area. A prefix of "0+STD code" is required to dial from a landline phone in one STD code area to another. A prefix of "0+STD code" is required to dial from a mobile phone in India to any landline number, irrespective of STD area.
For example, to dial a landline number in Indore, one would have to dial
- from a landline in Indore: the phone number
- from a landline in Mumbai: 0731 and then the phone number
- from any mobile phone in India: 0731 and then the phone number
- from outside India: Country Code 91 then 731 and then the phone number
Before 10 March 2009, as per Department of Telecommunications memorandum dated 9 February 2009.[2][3] there were some exceptions to this general rule for STD areas falling close to each other (within a radius of 200 kilometre), where "0" can be replaced with "95" e.g. to dial Delhi from Gurgaon, one dials 9511+landline number.
Mobile Numbers
A typical mobile number in India is "+91-XX-XXX-XXXXX". Where the first two digits indicate a mobile system operator, the next three denote the mobile switching code (MSC) while the remaining five digits are unique to the subscriber. However, with portability in place, the first two digits may not indicate a particular operator.
Short code
There are many companies in the Indian market who rent keywords, on a monthly basis, whose characters, on a typical mobile phone keypad, represent short codes. Short codes are five digits in length and have to start with the digit '5' like 58888 as of 2007. Previously, they were four-digit in number and could be of any combination, like 8888 or 7827. The current five digits can be extended by three digits further representing 3 additional characters. Messages sent to these Short Codes are commonly referred to as Premium Rate SMS Messages and cost from Rs. 3 to Rs. 6 per message depending on the operator as well as the service and the company.
Telemarketing
Telemarketers have been issued 10-digit telephone numbers starting with 140 (140XXXXXXX) by the Department of Telecommunications on TRAI's request.[4][5]
References
- ↑ "Maharashtra STD Codes". Retrieved 2017-07-17.
- ↑ "DoT Memorandum 10th Feb 09." (PDF). Retrieved 2009-04-08.
- ↑ TRAI for 10-digit landline numbers to meet crunch
- ↑ Trai fails to set deadline on pesky calls
- ↑ 'Publishing tariff plans by telecom service providers mandatory'
External links
- Department of Telecommunications, Government of India
- Telecom Regulatory Authority of India
- India National Numbering Plan of 2003