Tennessee's area code history: From 901 to 615 and beyond

Tennessee's area code history: From 901 to 615 and beyond

Tennessee's continued growth is reflected across many metrics, from towering new buildings to maddening rush-hour traffic.

  • But one factor that residents take especially personally is telephone area codes.
  • Why it matters: Area codes become synonymous with the cities they cover, even becoming points of regional pride. In Nashville, June 15 has become an unofficial holiday celebrating the 615 area.

    The big picture: Welcoming new numbers into the fold is an obvious sign of growth, and the changes that come with it.

    How it works: Area codes are assigned by the North American Numbering Plan Administrator (NANPA).

  • Each area code contains 8 million phone numbers, though not all of those are available for distribution (think: 211s, 411s, 911s, etc.).
  • NANPA assigns the numbers to phone service providers by prefix (the three digits that start a local phone number), which then distributes them to customers.
  • When it looks like an area is close to exhausting its available prefixes, a relief plan is crafted.
  • Flashback: Tennessee's area code history doubles as an overview of the state's fastest-growing regions over time. When area codes first launched in 1947, all of Tennessee was included under 901.

  • The 615 area code debuted in 1954. The state was split in two: West Tennessee took 901 and 615 went to everyone else.
  • Things cooled down for decades before the 423 emerged in 1995 to cover East Tennessee. This split made 615 the de facto signifier for the Nashville area.
  • In 1997, the 931 area code was created to cover parts of Middle Tennessee outside of the Nashville area.
  • Knoxville and its surrounding counties got the dedicated 865 area code in 1999. (🍊 Fun fact: This area code actually spells out VOL on a phone keypad.)
  • West Tennessee got the 731 area code for areas outside of Memphis in 2001.
  • Zoom in: Nashville added a second area code in 2015, with the rise of the 629 an overlay. So now new phone numbers in Music City get one of two codes.

  • Within a few years more than 100,000 numbers starting with 629 had been assigned, but 615 is still most closely tied to the regional identity.
  • The latest: The newest addition to Tennessee's roster, 729, launched last September, bringing the total number of area codes across the state today to eight.

  • That area code is now the second option in the 423 region covering Chattanooga Bristol and Johnson City.
  • What we're watching: NANPA releases regular reports predicting when different areas might run out of available number combinations.

  • Based on the latest report, Nashville won't run out of 615 and 629 phone numbers until 2057.