A 801 reads Wasatch Front insider
Restricted to the Salt Lake-Provo-Ogden corridor since 1997, 801 carries serious Mormon-corridor and Silicon Slopes credibility — distinct from the 385 overlay assigned to newer lines.
Get a 801 Salt Lake City, 385 metro overlay, 435 St. George/rural Utah or any of Utah's 3 area codes on the phone you already own. The Beehive State's full prefix map — pick the code your customers will recognise.
Utah has 3 active area codes — 801, 385, 435. You can get a virtual Utah phone number from any of these area codes through CallMama without a US address or SIM card.
Utah was assigned a single area code in 1947: 801, covering the entire state. The single code carried Utah through the post-war Mormon-corridor boom, the Salt Lake suburbs, the Park City ski expansion and the explosive Wasatch Front growth.
435 split from 801 in 1997 for everywhere outside the Wasatch Front — St. George, Cedar City, Moab, Park City, Logan, Vernal and rural Utah, leaving 801 restricted to the dense Wasatch corridor from Ogden through Salt Lake to Provo.
385 was added in 2009 as the Wasatch Front overlay — one of Utah's only overlay codes. Today 801 and 385 share the same urban geography while 435 covers roughly 80% of the state's land area but less than 20% of its population.
Utah's 801 covers the Wasatch Front — one of the most compact major US metros, with over 80% of the state's population living in a narrow 100-mile corridor between Provo and Ogden. The 435 area code covers everywhere else, including all five Utah national parks (Zion, Bryce, Arches, Canyonlands, Capitol Reef).
Every Utah area code plotted at its primary city. Click any marker for that code's details. Overlays share geography with their parent code — they're shown offset on the map for visibility.
Every Utah metro covered by a different prefix. Open any card to view its full detail page.
Find your city, find its area code, then activate a number with that prefix.
A local Utah prefix outperforms an out-of-state cell at every customer touchpoint.
Restricted to the Salt Lake-Provo-Ogden corridor since 1997, 801 carries serious Mormon-corridor and Silicon Slopes credibility — distinct from the 385 overlay assigned to newer lines.
Many of the newer Lehi/Draper tech offices opened with 385 numbers. A 385 prefix reads as "newer wave of Utah tech" — still Wasatch but not legacy.
St. George retirees, Park City ski businesses, Moab tourism operators all use 435. A 435 prefix reads as native to outdoor and rural Utah — distinct from the Wasatch corridor.
Utah sits in Mountain Time aligned with Denver, Phoenix, Albuquerque. A UT prefix tells Mountain West and SW clients you're on their schedule.
Run a 801 Wasatch line and a 435 rural line on one account — urban Salt Lake and national-parks coverage on one device.
Cancel service and your Utah number is reserved free for 12 months — keep your 801 across ski seasons and tech contract cycles.
Each Utah area code covers a distinct region. Here's how the population breaks down.
Source: US Census Bureau / ACS estimates.
Pick the digits, install the app, take the first call. That's the whole sequence.
CallMama generates 10–20 available numbers in any Utah area code. Vanity patterns supported.
Install CallMama on the device you already use. Sign in once — your Utah number is linked.
Inbound and outbound on the same device. Local Utah caller ID on every outgoing call.
Search by state, city, or number — then click any code to open its detail page. Utah is in here too.
| State | Area Codes | Time Zone | Count |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 205251256334659938 | CT | 6 |
| Alaska | 907 | AKT | 1 |
| Arizona | 480520602623928 | MST | 5 |
| Arkansas | 479501870 | CT | 3 |
| California | 213310408415510619650714818916 | PT | 10 |
| Colorado | 303719720970 | MT | 4 |
| Connecticut | 203475860959 | ET | 4 |
| Delaware | 302 | ET | 1 |
| District of Columbia | 202 | ET | 1 |
| Florida | 239305321407561727786813850904954 | ET* | 11 |
| Georgia | 229404470478678706762770912 | ET | 9 |
| Hawaii | 808 | HST | 1 |
| Idaho | 208986 | MT* | 2 |
| Illinois | 217224309312331618630708773779815847872 | CT | 13 |
| Indiana | 219260317463574765812930 | ET* | 8 |
| Iowa | 319515563641712 | CT | 5 |
| Kansas | 316620785913 | CT* | 4 |
| Kentucky | 270364502606859 | ET* | 5 |
| Louisiana | 225318337504985 | CT | 5 |
| Maine | 207 | ET | 1 |
| Maryland | 240301410443667 | ET | 5 |
| Massachusetts | 339351413508617774781857978 | ET | 9 |
| Michigan | 231248269313517586616734810906947989 | ET* | 12 |
| Minnesota | 218320507612651763952 | CT | 7 |
| Mississippi | 228601662769 | CT | 4 |
| Missouri | 314417573636660816 | CT | 6 |
| Montana | 406 | MT | 1 |
| Nebraska | 308402531 | CT* | 3 |
| Nevada | 702725775 | PT | 3 |
| New Hampshire | 603 | ET | 1 |
| New Jersey | 201551609732848856862908973 | ET | 9 |
| New Mexico | 505575 | MT | 2 |
| New York | 212315332347516518585607631646680716718838845914917929934 | ET | 19 |
| North Carolina | 252336704743828910919980984 | ET | 9 |
| North Dakota | 701 | CT* | 1 |
| Ohio | 216234330380419440513567614740937 | ET | 11 |
| Oklahoma | 405539580918 | CT | 4 |
| Oregon | 458503541971 | PT* | 4 |
| Pennsylvania | 215267272412445484570610717724814878 | ET | 12 |
| Rhode Island | 401 | ET | 1 |
| South Carolina | 803843854864 | ET | 4 |
| South Dakota | 605 | CT* | 1 |
| Tennessee | 423615629731865901931 | CT* | 7 |
| Texas | 210214254281325346361409430432469512682713737806817830832903 | CT* | 20 |
| Utah | 385435801 | MT | 3 |
| Vermont | 802 | ET | 1 |
| Virginia | 276434540571703757804 | ET | 7 |
| Washington | 206253360425509564 | PT | 6 |
| West Virginia | 304681 | ET | 2 |
| Wisconsin | 262414534608715920 | CT | 6 |
| Wyoming | 307 | MT | 1 |
| Puerto Rico | 787939 | AST | 2 |
One tap to install. One more to call. It really is that simple.