Telephone numbers in the Dominican Republic
- Area code 809 redirects here. 809 once covered Bermuda and many islands in the Caribbean which have since been allocated their own codes; see Area codes in the Caribbean for more details.
Telephone numbers in the Dominican Republic use area code 809 with 829 and 849 as overlay codes. Telecommunications in the Dominican Republic use the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) country code, 1, followed by the area code in the same form as an internal area code in other NANP countries, such as the US and Canada.
When in the Dominican Republic, the 3-digit area code followed by the 7-digit phone number must be dialed. When calling the Dominican Republic from the United States or Canada, this must be prefixed by the digit "1". From other countries the international prefix used in the originating country must be dialled before the "1".
Area Code 809
Area code 809 was created on January 1, 1958. Initially, the 809 area-code was used for all of the Caribbean, with the exception of Cuba, Haiti, Aruba, the Netherlands Antilles, and the French West Indies. During the mid-1990s (March 1, 1996), Area Code 809 was split and eventually just assigned to the Dominican Republic.[1] Following the departure of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines from 809 in 1999, no other countries use the legacy 809 area code. Today, Area Code 809 and its overlay area codes, 829 and 849, are used solely for the Dominican Republic.
Area Codes 829 and 849
Area Code 829 was added to local telephony as an overlay code, initially optional in July 2005 and later mandatory in November 2005. The new telephony rules were almost wholly due to the explosive growth of cellular communication in the Dominican Republic, starting in the mid-1990s with telephone prepaid-cards, and growing incredibly through the early 2000s with the launch of two new cell-phone carriers, Orange and Centennial, in addition to the preexisting CODETEL and TRICOM. Besides, the reason for this newly placed dual area code system is because it is estimated a standard 7-digit area code could hold around 7.8 million number combinations, and currently there are around 1.6 million land-based lines and 4.2 million cellular phones. Thus it was decided to attach another area-code to this country, because of the extensive growth and threat of number depletion.
In early 2009 a decision was made to add a second overlay code, Area Code 849. The triple area code system went into effect on February 15, 2010.[2]
809 scam and One Ring Scam
Telephone fraud scams once revolved around the 809 area code; it was being used since calling international numbers from the United States is charged at a higher rate than domestic calls.[3] The charge is set jointly by the originating and terminating countries; the foreign country portion of the charge could be very high, and there was no regulation by anyone. There may have been a resurgence with wireless telephones.[4] The victim receives a message on their answering machine to call a number with an 809 area code. Since there were many new area codes being introduced in the US, the victim thinks nothing of it and dials the 809 number. The number dialed is however an international number with a share of the revenue going from the foreign telephone company to the operator of the number (the party that got the call to be placed). The victim could be put on hold indefinitely, and billed for each minute they are on hold. This is a form of fraud, though technically legal.[5]
More recently, a similar scam has emerged due to the prevalence of wireless phones which display callback numbers automatically, known as the "one ring scam". The person perpetuating the scam calls the victim via a robodialer or similar means, sometimes at odd hours of the night, then hangs up when the phone is answered with the hope that they will be curious enough to call the number back. When the victim does this, an automatic $19.95 international call fee is charged to their account, as well as $9.00/min thereafter. Similar scams have been linked to Grenada (area code 473), Antigua (area code 268), Jamaica (area code 876) and the British Virgin Islands (area code 284).[6]
See also
References
- ↑ "Area code 809 (2/Jan)". Retrieved 2014-01-02.
- ↑ "New area code 849 begins February 15 in Dominican Republic". Retrieved 2014-04-22.
- ↑ http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/consumerfacts/809.html
- ↑ http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/consumerfacts/809.html
- ↑ http://www.lincmad.com/telesleaze.html
- ↑ BBB Warns of One Ring Cell Phone Scam Archived February 19, 2014, at the Wayback Machine.
External links
- North American Numbering Plan Administration (NANPA)
- Telecommunications in The Caribbean
- Federal Communications Commission regarding the 809 scam
- AT&T webpage regarding the 809 scam and subsequent spam. Retrieved September 17, 2007.
- scambusters.org webpage regarding the spammed version of their 809 warning. Retrieved May 7, 2006.
- List of exchanges from AreaCodeDownload.com, 809 Area Code
- List of exchanges from AreaCodeDownload.com, 829 Area Code
- List of exchanges from AreaCodeDownload.com, 849 Area Code
Dominican Republic area codes: 809, 829, 849 | ||
---|---|---|
North: 649 | ||
West: Country code +509 in Haiti | Area code 809/829/849 | East: 787/939 |
South: Caribbean Sea | ||
Puerto Rico area codes: 787, 939 | ||
Turks and Caicos Islands area codes: 649 |