Bringing real-time clarity, accurate geographic routing data, and robust fraud defense to North America's phone systems.
At USA Area Code Lookup, our vision is to demystify the complex web of modern telecommunications. In an era dominated by automated robocalls, overseas number spoofing, and frequent area code overlays, consumers and businesses deserve immediate, uncompromising clarity regarding who is calling them.
Our mission is straightforward: to provide the most accurate, real-time geographic and telecommunications registry data in North America. We equip everyday consumers, legal investigators, and data-driven commercial enterprises with powerful, intuitive tools to identify caller origins, active timezones, and carrier profiles instantly.
USA Area Code Lookup is backed by a dedicated, interdisciplinary team of veteran telecommunications analysts, senior software architects, and data privacy advocates. Our leadership brings over two decades of combined expertise in carrier routing protocols, NANP compliance, and telecommunications infrastructure.
Former senior infrastructure engineer at major tier-1 telecommunications carriers. Marcus spent 14 years architecting North American switching networks and oversees our core NANPA database synchronization protocols.
Ph.D. in Information Science with a specialization in telecommunications registry validation. Elena ensures that all regional guides, timezone logic, and scam alerts meet the highest standards of academic and factual accuracy.
Veteran cybersecurity and telecom fraud investigator. David monitors emerging Caribbean premium-rate toll scams (Wangiri), FCC regulatory updates, and robocall trends to keep our security guides ahead of the curve.
In the telecommunications sector, data accuracy is not just a featureβit is an absolute necessity. Our platform is engineered from the ground up to fulfill Google's rigorous E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness) criteria.
We do not rely on static, outdated lists. Our core database synchronizes directly with official North American Numbering Plan Administrator (NANPA) registries and Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) releases.
Every reverse lookup and prefix search undergoes multi-point algorithmic validation. We cross-reference central office codes (NXX), active daylight saving boundaries, and carrier exchange records in real time.
Unlike predatory lookup directories, we operate with a strict zero-tracking policy. We do not harvest searched phone numbers, we do not sell consumer lookup logs, and we never require invasive user registration.
Everything we build is guided by four foundational pillars that dictate our editorial standards, engineering practices, and community commitments:
We believe false information is worse than no information. Every regional guide, history article, and timezone status window is subjected to rigorous fact-checking and continuous peer review.
We pioneer cutting-edge telecommunications tooling, including our proprietary Smart Extractor, interactive timezone mapping, and real-time business calling window indicators.
We actively fight back against predatory telecom practices. We provide free, accessible educational resources to help vulnerable populations identify one-ring scams, spoofing, and toll fraud.
To maintain the highest tier of E-E-A-T and factual integrity, our data pipelines and expert articles cross-reference and cite the following primary telecommunications authorities across North America and the globe:
The official North American Numbering Plan Administrator. Cited for new area code overlays, regional splits, and numbering resource exhaust forecasts.
Federal Communications Commission. Cited for interstate telecommunications regulations, STIR/SHAKEN robocall mitigation, and consumer protection laws.
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. The premier regulatory authority cited for all Canadian area code allocations and National DNCL rules.
Canadian Numbering Administrator. Cited for precise central office code (NXX) exhaust data and active relief planning across Canadian provinces.
Federal Trade Commission. Cited in our scam identification guides (e.g., Area Code 473 Wangiri fraud) and national telemarketing registry enforcement.
International Telecommunication Union. Cited for global numbering standards, country code allocations, and international telecommunications infrastructure.
Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions. Cited for industry numbering committee guidelines, carrier exchange protocols, and caller ID spoofing defense.