In 1947, the
American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT&T) announced the first nationwide
telephone numbering plan and divided the United States and Canada into 86 numbering plan areas and assigned the
original North American area codes, a unique code for each area, to speed the connection times for
operator toll dialing. The state of Florida was a single numbering plan area with area code 305. In 1953, with the development of
direct distance dialing, the western part of the peninsula from the
Tampa Bay area south, which was serviced mostly by
General Telephone (GTE), was designated as a separate numbering plan area with
area code 813. As a result of the increase in the state's population,
North Florida from the
Panhandle to
Jacksonville was assigned
area code 904 with a permissive dialing period beginning July 6, 1965, and mandatory dialing beginning January 1, 1966. On April 16, 1988, the east coast of Florida from
Palm Beach County north through
Brevard County, as well as the
Orlando metropolitan area, was assigned
area code 407. On September 11, 1995,
Broward County was split from 305 and assigned
area code 954. It was predicted that the new area code would delay but not prevent phone numbers in the 305 area code from being completely used up in a few years. Within two years, the reconfigured area code 305 was close to exhaustion due to growth in Dade County from the increasing popularity of
cell phones and
pagers. In mitigation, area code 786 was installed as an overlay on March 1, 1998. The overlay numbering plan area originally comprised only
Miami-Dade County, although it was clear the remainder of area code 305 would eventually be overlaid with area code 786.
Monroe County was added to area code 786 on September 1, 2001. The Florida Public Service Commission approved a third area code for the Miami region on February 25, 2022.
Area code 645 was activated on August 4, 2023, before the anticipated exhaust of central office codes in 305 and 786, which was likely to occur in 2023. ==In popular culture==