Africa Kenya In
Kenya, announced in 2004 that mobile number portability would be available as of July 1, 2005 and fixed-line number portability as of July 1, 2006. Mobile Number Portability was officially launched on April 1, 2011.
South Africa In
South Africa, announced Number Portability Company (Pty) Ltd (Reg. No. 2005/040348/07) was established in 2005 and Mobile Number Portability was introduced on 10 November 2006. Geographic Number Portability (between fixed operators) was introduced on 26 April 2010. The Mobile Number Portability Company is jointly owned by the mobile and fixed operators including Vodacom, MTN, Cell C, Telkom and Neotel.
Americas Argentina In
Argentina, full mobile number portability is available since March 2012, being a law approved in 2000. It originally took up to ten working days to be effective. Since July 2017, however, it takes up to a 24-hour period to be effective.
Brazil In
Brazil, number portability (both fixed and mobile) is available nationwide since March, 2009. However, it's not possible to port a fixed line number to a mobile line number and vice versa . It's possible to carry the fixed line number within the same municipality and for mobile line number within the same area code (comprising from parts of a state to an entire state).
Canada In
Canada, wireline/competitive local exchange carriers must provide portability. As of March 14, 2007, wireless carriers must provide portability in most of Canada. Numbers are only portable within an LIR (
local interconnection region), regions defined by the ILEC and approved by the
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), each of which covers a number of exchanges. Each LIR has a Point of Interconnection (POI) exchange through which calls are routed, and if a number is ported out to a different LIR then calls to that destination will be rejected by the POI switch. Not all exchanges support LNP, typically there needs to exist competition within an exchange before an ILEC will enable portability, and then only by request. Most small local
independent telephone company exchanges are exempted from competition and local number portability requirements. Numbers in the rarely used non-geographic
area code 600 are not portable.
Dominican Republic In the
Dominican Republic, number portability in both mobile and local telephony was launched on September 30, 2009. In March 2009, the Dominican Telecommunications Institute (INDOTEL) selected Informática El Corte Inglés to administer the number portability.
Ecuador In
Ecuador, Mobile Number Portability has been available since 12 October 2009.
Mexico In the
Mexico is first Latin American country to have number portability in both mobile and local telephony. On August 29, 2019, the
Federal Telecommunications Institute (IFT) announced that at the request of the telecommunications service providers, it would migrate its portability database administration to Mediafon Datapro. As a result, portability was temporarily suspended from August 30 to September 1. On September 2, portability was resumed with the service now being handled by Mediafon Datapro.
United States In the
United States, (b)(2), added by the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, requires all
local exchange carriers (LECs) to offer number portability in accordance with the regulations of the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC). The FCC implemented regulations on 27 June 1996, with LECs required to implement them in the 100 largest
Metropolitan Statistical Areas by 1 October 1997 and elsewhere by 31 December 1998. (The regulations are currently located at ,
et seq.) The
North American Numbering Council (NANC) was directed to select the Local Number Portability Administrators (LNPAs), akin to the
North American Numbering Plan (NANP) which administers the
North American Numbering Plan. LNP was first implemented in the US upon the establishment of the original
Number Portability Administration Center (NPAC) in
Chicago,
Illinois, in 1998. This service covered select rate centers in the Ameritech region. Thereafter, as switches and telephone networks were upgraded with
location routing number (LRN) capability, LNP was deployed sequentially to the remaining
Regional Bell Operating Company (RBOC) areas. The FCC since has mandated
Wireless Local Number Portability starting November 24, 2003 (in metropolitan areas) and allowed operators to charge an additional monthly
Long-Term Telephone Number Portability End-Use Charge as compensation. On November 10, 2003, the FCC additionally ruled that number portability applies to
landline numbers moving to mobile telephones and, on October 31, 2007, the FCC made clear that the obligation to provide LNP extends to
VoIP providers.
Toll-free telephone numbers (area code +1-800) have been portable through the
RespOrg system since 1993 in the US and 1994 in Canada.
Asia Hong Kong In
Hong Kong, fixed line number portability has been available since July 1, 1995, the same day of fixed line telephone market liberalization (i.e., reversal of franchised monopoly), which was a requirement from the government.
Mobile number portability has been available since March 1, 1999. Hong Kong was the first country in Asia offering number portability. Although the government allowed porting a fixed line number to a mobile carrier or vice versa, the introduction of this service shall be decided by the fixed/mobile carriers in a voluntary basis. As of October 2009, fixed-mobile number portability is not available.
India In
India, mobile number portability launched in the state of Haryana on November 25, 2010. It was finally launched all over India on January 20, 2011.
Japan In
Japan, fixed line portability began in March, 2001. (bangō portability seido – commonly referred to as portability or MNP) began on October 24, 2006. Users are able to change cellular phone carriers without changing their number for a fee of 5000 yen. However, e-mail addresses are subject to change, and music/data downloaded may become unusable. The Japanese Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications (MIC) spent three years to put mobile number portability into practice, since its initial workgroup started in November, 2003. As a result, NTT DoCoMo, KDDI and Softbank accelerated the price battle, but it was of little effect due to already competitive price plans and customer loyalty. Overall, mobile number portability in Japan was not very successful, because of high transition costs for the customer due to
SIM lock, the long time it took to establish mobile number portability, allowing operators to fence in subscribers with price plans, and the significance of mobile Internet mail.
Malaysia In
Malaysia, mobile number portability plan to start by mid-2008, according to an article on the National News Agency Bernama
Pakistan In
Pakistan, () the
PTA mandated mobile number portability on March 23, 2007. Users are able to change their cellular phone service for free. They just have to pay for new sim cards depending upon the provider they are migrating. Some companies even do not charge anything.
Singapore Singapore was one of the first countries to introduce number portability for mobile telephones in 1997. This is currently implemented through voice call & SMS forwarding. True number portability was realized from June 13, 2008, with the implementation of a Centralised Number Portability Database Solution, as proposed by the Infocomm Development Authority (IDA) of Singapore.
South Korea In
South Korea, mobile number portability service started from January 1, 2004. One thing different from other countries is that it started from
SK Telecom, the dominant operator which has over 50% of market share. To prevent users' churning to the dominant operator, the government gave six months' and one year's delay to the second and the third operator, respectively. As a result, only SK Telecom's subscribers could move to other operators during the first six months.
Sri Lanka In
Sri Lanka, mobile number portability service started in August 2007. This is supported by
Sri Lanka Telecom owned
Mobitel Lanka and other cellular operators.
Europe In the
European Union, all telephone providers are required to provide number portability under the
Universal Services Directive (2002/22/EU).
Albania In
Albania, mobile number portability was implemented in 04.05.2011 [https://akep.al/njoftime-aktivitete/116-realizohet-bartja-e-numrit-te-pare (AKEP) . For fixed-line numbers, it started on some geographical areas in September 2012 and was available in all country by 01.04.2013 (AKEP) .
Austria In
Austria, number portability was implemented in October 2004.
Belgium In
Belgium, number portability was implemented in October 2002.
Cyprus In
Cyprus, geographic, non-geographic and mobile number portability is required as of July 12, 2004.
Denmark In
Denmark, portability of fixed line numbers and ISDN was implemented on January 1, 2001. Mobile number portability was implemented on July 1, 2001. In 2006, 238,293 fixed lines were ported, along with 456,159 mobile lines. Considering that the number of fixed lines by the end of 2006 was 2,974,000 and the number of mobile lines was 5.828.000, roughly 7.9% of lines were ported in 2006.
Estonia In
Estonia, number portability is required from fixed operators since January 1, 2004 and should be required from mobile operators as from January 1, 2005. The impact of mobile number portability in Finland exceeds that of other countries. In one year (June 2003 – June 2004), the combined market share of TeliaSonera, Elisa and DNA fell from 98.7% to 87.9%.
France In
France, geographic number portability has been available since January 1, 1998. As of January 1, 2001, it became possible to change geographic location or operator while keeping the same number. Mobile number portability was introduced on June 30, 2003. However, due to its lack of effectiveness, a new system was launched on May 21, 2007 with two objectives: having a single contact for the customer (the new operator should take all the steps towards mobile number portability) and a maximum period of ten days for mobile number portability to have effect.
Germany In
Germany, fixed number portability was introduced on January 1, 1998, for geographic numbers and numbers for non-geographic services. Mobile number portability was implemented on November 1, 2002.
Luxembourg In
Luxembourg, mobile number portability introduced in June 2004. The Mobile Number Portability Central (MNPC) managed by the G.I.E Telcom E.I.G. operator group and developed, installed and operated by Systor Trondheim AS of Norway, was put into commercial operations from February 2005.
Norway In
Norway, Fixed number portability was introduced in 2000, one year before the introduction of mobile number portability. The administrative solution for fixed and mobile number portability in Norway, the National Reference Database (NRDB), was put into service in 2000. The NRDB is owned and managed by the 8 largest network operators in Norway through the company NRDB AS. The reference database was developed, installed and is presently operated by Systor Trondheim AS.
Portugal In
Portugal, fixed number portability was implemented on June 30, 2001. Mobile number portability has been available since January 1, 2002. The administrative Reference Entity (Entidade de Referencia (ER)) interconnecting all network operators and service providers is operated by a local third party, Portabil S.A. , a joint venture between the internationally well known companies Logica and Systor Trondheim AS.
Slovakia In
Slovakia, number portability was implemented in May 2004.
Spain In
Spain, number portability among cell phone carriers is available since October 1, 2000, without any cost to the end user. The technical details for the process are regulated by the CMT
(Comisión del Mercado de las Telecomunicaciones or Telecoms Market Commission) and all carriers are obliged to comply with their requirements. As of August 2007, cell number portability must complete in 5 business days (i.e. excluding weekends) from the moment the request is confirmed by the customer, with the actual switch occurring late at night to avoid missing any calls. The user wakes up using a new SIM-card from the new cell provider while keeping the number. In the mature Spanish cell phone market (as of June 2007, with 107 lines per 100 inhabitants ), portability has been widely used by the competing carriers as a way to steal each other's customers, usually offering them free handsets or extra credit. From June 2006 to June 2007 alone, 3,957,556 cell phone lines switched carriers via this proceeding, about 10% of all cellular lines in use. As for the fixed line market, number portability is also available since year 2000, but weaker competition meant that actual adoption of the fixed number portability process was quite sluggish. As of August 2004, 1,041,246 fixed line switches were completed. Fixed line market is peculiar in Spain, since only two
local loop providers can operate at each particular region (or
demarcación as regulated by the CMT): a
cable carrier (such as Ono, R and many others) and the former State monopoly (
Telefónica). The sole of them operating statewide—Telefónica—is obliged to provide other firms with access to their exchange facilities or rental/transfer of their copper last-mile loops, at fees regulated by the CMT (practice known as
local loop unbundling). As cable providers do not have a statewide footprint, many users have no actual chance of applying for "true" fixed number portability, that is, giving up Telefónica's service altogether. Some of them can however get their service from a third company who will bill the service and then pay Telefónica for the copper pair rental and maintenance fees, with the customer receiving a single bill. In the end, as Telefónica set up a reselling program for their fixed lines and DSL internet access, the former monopoly is still much in control of the fixed line market, including profitable broadband access. In fact, Telefónica was fined in excess of €152 million by the
European Commission on July 4, 2007 on ground of "impeding competition on the Spanish broadband internet access market for more than five years, and so depriving consumers and business of a choice of broadband suppliers". Due to the billing scheme used throughout Europe and most of the world, where the calling party assumes the full cost of the call, and calling a cellphone is usually more expensive than calling a fixed line, a distinction must be made between cellphone numbers (beginning with "6" or, from October 2011, "71", "72", "73" or "74", ) and fixed numbers (usually beginning with 9 or 8). Full number portability in which a customer transfers a cell to a fixed number or vice versa is thus not possible. See
Telephone numbering in Spain for more information.
Sweden In
Sweden, fixed line portability was implemented in 1999 and mobile number portability was implemented on September 1, 2001. At the introduction of mobile number portability the Swedish operators joined forces and procured a central solution, SNPAC CRDB, which is a central reference database now containing both the fixed and mobile portings.
Switzerland In
Switzerland, mobile number portability is available since March 1, 2000, and land line number portability since April 2002.
Turkey In
Turkey, mobile number portability was implemented in Nov 2008. Fixed number portability was initially planned to take place exactly 6 months following the mobile number portability, on May 9, 2009. However, it was not until September 9, 2009 that the regulator approved the procedure for fixed number portability. Since then, fixed and mobile operators, and the incumbent, are working to get the process going and performing interoperability tests. However, there is still progress to be made and the progress for fixed number portability has not proved to be going ahead as in-time as the mobile number portability.
United Kingdom In the
United Kingdom,
Ofcom directs
fixed-line telephone network providers, mobile phone providers and broadband service providers to provide number portability under the
Porting Authorisation Code rules and
Migration Authorisation Code code of practice respectively. As the UK was an EU member country, the Ofcom direction was intended to reflect the requirements of EU Directive 2002/22/EU.
Serbia In
Serbia, number portability service on public telephone networks at a fixed location is available as of 1 April 2014.
Middle East Israel In
Israel, number portability is free and takes 15 minutes. All cellular lines can be ported, Landline numbers may be ported, except between regions (area codes). Wireless and VoIP companies each have a single area code for the whole country. Within it, numbers may be ported with no regard to geographic area. There is no porting between landline and cellular lines. (date implemented? http://www.moc.gov.il/new/documents/engineering/faq_24.8.05.pdf )
Oman In
Oman, Mobile Number Portability was mandated on the Public Mobile Operators,
Nawras and
Oman Mobile, via the licenses issued to them by the Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (TRA). Mobile number portability was launched on August 26, 2006. Users are able to change cellular phone carriers without changing their number for a nominal fee of 3 OMR.
Saudi Arabia In
Saudi Arabia mobile number portability was launched on July 8, 2006, to be the first country to launch this service in the ME region. A centralized number portability clearinghouse (NPC) solution was implemented by CITC(the telecom regulation authority) and the two mobile phone operators were obliged to implement the MNP solution in their networks and to interface with the NPC. the service was provided to the mobile subscribers for free.
Oceania Australia In
Australia, local telephone numbers have been portable since 1999. The porting process is based on a peer-to-peer file exchange between fixed line operators. According to ACMA, local number portability came into full effect at the start of 2000. Mobile number portability has been available as of September 25, 2001. For service providers who require knowledge of porting activity to enable them to deliver voice calls directly to the current "network owner", they can either form agreements with all of the fixed-line operators, or use a third-party LNP provider, such as Paradigm.One.
New Zealand In
New Zealand, local and mobile number portability (LMNP) began on April 1, 2007. The rules governing LMNP originate in the Number Portability Determination. Ports are authorised, scheduled, and coordinated via a centralised number portability system called IPMS (Industry Portability Management System). All networks update their own routing and confirm this to IPMS. There are now 26 carriers and service providers that participate in LMNP in New Zealand, over a million numbers have been ported. ==See also==