Telephone Numbers In Germany - Wikipedia
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| Country | Germany |
|---|---|
| Continent | Europe |
| Regulator | Federal Network Agency |
| Numbering plan type | Open |
| NSN length | 3 to 13[1] |
| Format | (xx…) xx… |
| Country code | 49 |
| International access | 00 |
| Long-distance | 0 |
| List of Germany area codes | |
The regulation of telephone numbers in Germany is the responsibility of the Federal Network Agency (German: Bundesnetzagentur, BNetzA) of the German government. The agency has a mandate to telecommunications in Germany and other infrastructure systems.
Overview
[edit]Germany has an open telephone numbering plan. Before 2010, area codes and subscriber telephone numbers had no fixed size, meaning that some subscriber numbers may be as short as two digits. As a result, dialing sequences are generally of a variable length, except for some non-geographic area codes for which subscriber numbers use a fixed-length format. It is not possible to determine unambiguously the end of a phone number from a prefix or the digits already dialed. This feature allows the extension of the length of phone numbers without revoking or changing existing numbers. Mobile telephones are assigned to non-geographic codes, making them readily recognizable.
A new numbering plan was introduced on 3 May 2010. Since then newly assigned landline telephone numbers have a standard length of eleven digits, including the area code. Area codes remained unchanged, variable in length. Exceptions to the eleven-digit rule are the four cities of Berlin, Frankfurt, Hamburg, and Munich, which are the only cities with two-digit area codes and have ten-digit numbers to avoid exceeding the maximum length of eight digits for a subscriber number.[2]
The German telephone network uses 5,200 geographical area codes, the length of which varies from two to five digits (not including the trunk code 0), with five-digit area codes being assigned only in the New States (prefix 3). In general, geographic area codes start with digits 2 to 9, whereas other non-geographic area codes (including those for cell phones) are assigned to 1 and network services to 11.[3]
Geographic numbering
[edit] Main article: Area codes in GermanyGeographic area codes have a length of two to five digits. The maximum length of a complete telephone number is eleven digits.
Numbers for geographic area codes are assigned to carriers in blocks. Subscriber numbers do not start with 0 or 11 and can be dialled without area code from landlines within the same geographic area code.
Originally, the first digits following the area code indicated a smaller service area or the type of the subscriber line (analogue or ISDN). This is no longer true as subscribers can keep their numbers when moving within an area code or when switching from analogue to ISDN. Furthermore, new carriers assign numbers from different blocks.
- (xx) xxxx-xxxx
- (xxx) xxxx-xxxx
- (xxxx) xxx-xxxx
- (3xxxx) xx-xxxx
Non-geographic numbering
[edit] Main article: Area codes in GermanyNon-geographic numbers were originally assigned the prefix 1. However, some of these services have been moved to other area codes.
- 10xy, 100yy
- 11…
- 12xx-xxxxxxx…
- 137-xxx xxxxxxx, (138-1xxx…)
- 15xx-xxxxxxx, 16x-xxxxxxx, 17x-xxxxxxx
| Prefix(ex) | In use by | MNP |
|---|---|---|
| 151, 160, 170, 171, 175 | Telekom | yes |
| 152, 162, 172, 173, 174 | Vodafone | yes |
| 155, 157, 159, 163, 176, 177, 178, 179 | o2 Germany | yes |
| 156 | 1&1 AG | yes |
| 164, 168, 169 | e*message (pagers) | no |
- 18xx-xxxxxxx…18xxxxxxx-xx
- 180-xxxxxxx
| Prefix | Rate | rate from landlines | rate from mobile phones |
|---|---|---|---|
| 180-1 | time-based rate 1 | 0.039 €/min. | max. 0.42 €/min. |
| 180-2 | per-call rate 1 | 0.06 €/call | max. 0.42 €/min. |
| 180-3 | time-based rate 2 | 0.09 €/min. | max. 0.42 €/min. |
| 180-4 | per-call rate 2 | 0.20 €/call | max. 0.42 €/min. |
| 180-5 | time-based rate 3 | 0.14 €/min. | max. 0.42 €/min. |
| 180-6 | per-call rate 3 | 0.20 €/call. | max. 0.60 €/call. |
| 180-7 | time-based rate 4, first 30 seconds free | 0.14 €/min. after 30s | max. 0.42 €/min. after 30s |
- 181-xxx-x…, 181-xxxx-x…
- 19xxx
- 198…, 199…
- 31-x
- 32-xxxxxxxxx
- 700-xxxxxxxx
- 800-xxxxxxx
- 900-x-xxxxxx
| Prefix | Service Type |
|---|---|
| 900-1 | Information services (no adult content) |
| 900-3 | Entertainment services (no adult content) |
| 900-5 | Other services (including those offering adult content) |
- 9009-xxxxxxx
Emergency and network services
[edit]Network services are not dialed with the trunk prefix 0. They resemble local numbers that start with 11 but usually cannot be dialed after an area code.
- 110 – Police
- 112 – Fire brigade, ambulance, rescue services (also the universal emergency number in the EU)
- 115 – Civil services (Bürgertelefon); requests are either answered directly or forwarded to the competent authority in the caller's region. The caller can access local government services and book appointments at government offices.[5][6]
- 116 xxx – Harmonised services of social value
- 118 xx – Directory assistance
- 19 222 – Non-emergency medical transports. This number is not an emergency number but a local number assigned uniformly in all geographic area codes. This requires dialling the area code from mobile phones or other non-geographic lines.
History
[edit]Before German reunification, East Germany used country code 37. West Berlin was integrated into the West German telephone network, using the same country code (49) of West Germany, with the area code 311,[7] later changed to 030.[8] Unlike West Germany, from which calls to East Berlin were made using the prefix 00372 (international access code 00, East German country code 37, area code 2),[9] calls from West Berlin required only the short code 0372.[10] Conversely, those made to West Berlin from East Berlin only required the short code 849.[11]
In 1992, two years after reunification, the telephone networks were merged under country code 49.
Geographic numbers in the New States were assigned area codes starting with 3, in some cases followed by the former East German area code (without the initial 0) or a code similar to it. Thus, Leipzig, for example, which had used East German domestic area code 41, was assigned the new area code 341 in the unified telephone system. On the other hand, some area codes were changed: for example, the small town of Zossen used to have East German area code 323, but the new area code is 3377. Area code 30, formerly used by West Berlin, was assigned to the entire reunified Berlin.
Withdrawing country code 37 freed the three-digit numbering block 37x for assignments. Several country were assigned such codes, for example: 370 for Lithuania, 374 for Armenia, 375 for Belarus, as well as some microstates whose telephone networks had formerly been integrated to those of surrounding larger countries (e.g., 376 for Andorra, 377 for Monaco and 378 for San Marino).
The German telephone network became fully digital in 1997, allowing more flexible use of the numbering space.
On 1 January 1998, the Federal Network Agency (named the Regulatory Authority for Telecommunications and Postal Services at the time) became the numbering authority for telephone numbers in Germany.
See also
[edit]- List of dialing codes in Germany
- Telephone numbers in the German Democratic Republic
References
[edit]- ^ Archived copy Archived 2021-11-02 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Bundesnetzagentur - Nummerierung".
- ^ a b Bundesnetzagentur (Federal Network Agency). "Nummerierungskonzept 2011 (Numbering Concept of 2011)" (PDF) (in German). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 September 2020. Retrieved 24 October 2019.
- ^ "Zugeteilte Rufnummerblöcke (Mobilfunk)". bundesnetzagentur.de. Retrieved 19 September 2024.
- ^ "115: The public administration's customer service". 115.de. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
- ^ "Bürgertelefon 115 – der zentrale, telefonische Zugang zur Berliner Verwaltung". Berlin.de. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
- ^ Der Kunsthandel Archived 2022-10-31 at the Wayback Machine, Volume 63, A. Hüthig., 1971, page 36
- ^ Wasser, Luft und Betreib Archived 2022-10-31 at the Wayback Machine, Volume 21, 1977, page 360
- ^ The American Bar, the Canadian Bar, the International Bar, Volumes 1-2, R.B. Forster & Associates, 1986, pages 4133
- ^ 0372 – der Anschluss des Ostens, Die Vorwahl fürs andere Berlin führte oft ins Leere Archived 2021-10-03 at the Wayback Machine, Der Tagesspiegel, 2 October 2005
- ^ Rieseln lassen Archived 2021-08-22 at the Wayback Machine, Der Spiegel, 27 August 1972
- ITU allocations list
External links
[edit]- 115 official site
- Federal Network Agency - Number Management (German)
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