What Is the 855 Area Code?
The 855 "area code" is not a geographic area code at all — it is a toll-free prefix. Numbers that begin with 1-855 are toll-free, meaning the business that owns the number pays for incoming calls so that customers can reach it at no charge.
855 is one of seven toll-free prefixes in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP), the system that governs phone numbering across the United States, Canada, and much of the Caribbean. The full set, in the order they were opened, is 800, 888, 877, 866, 855, 844, and 833.
Unlike a geographic code such as 212 (New York) or 415 (San Francisco), 855 reveals nothing about location. A business in Miami, Seattle, or Toronto can all hold 855 numbers, and every one of them works identically across North America.
855 is increasingly common in customer-service and sales lines; callers recognize the 8XX pattern as toll-free even when the specific prefix is newer.
Is 855 Toll-Free?
Yes — 855 is a genuine toll-free prefix. Every number in the format 1-855-XXX-XXXX is toll-free by definition. When a customer dials it, the call is billed to the receiving business rather than the caller, which is why toll-free numbers are a staple of customer-service, sales, and support lines.
All seven toll-free prefixes are interchangeable in how they work. There is no such thing as a "cheaper" or "less real" toll-free code — 800, 888, 877, 866, 855, 844, and 833 are all administered under the same rules, dialed the same way, and routed through the same toll-free system. For a deeper explanation of how the model works, see the toll-free numbers guide.
History of the 855 Prefix
The 855 prefix opened in 2010 after a decade-long gap in new toll-free codes. It is a modern toll-free prefix with a deep pool of unclaimed numbers, dialed and billed exactly like 800.
Toll-free service in North America began in 1967, when the 800 prefix was introduced to replace the manual, operator-assisted collect-call systems businesses had relied on. For decades, 800 was the only toll-free code, and "1-800" became one of the most recognized number patterns in advertising.
As demand grew, a single three-digit prefix could no longer supply enough numbers. New toll-free codes were opened one after another — 888 in 1996, 877 in 1998, 866 in 2000, 855 in 2010, 844 in 2013, and 833 in 2017 — each added when the previous codes neared exhaustion.
Because it launched relatively recently, 855 offers strong availability of clean and vanity numbers compared with the older 800 and 888 codes.
855 vs Other Toll-Free Numbers
All seven toll-free prefixes function identically. The practical differences come down to age, brand recognition, and how many numbers are still available. Here is how 855 compares to the rest of the toll-free family:
| Prefix | Introduced | Position | Availability of new numbers |
|---|---|---|---|
| 800 | 1967 | original | Limited — largely assigned |
| 888 | 1996 | second | Limited — largely assigned |
| 877 | 1998 | third | Good |
| 866 | 2000 | fourth | Good |
| 855 (this page) | 2010 | fifth | Good |
| 844 | 2013 | sixth | Excellent — deep pool |
| 833 | 2017 | newest | Excellent — deep pool |
The takeaway: if brand recognition matters most and you can find the number you want, an older prefix like 800 or 888 is ideal. If you want the widest choice of clean or vanity numbers, a newer prefix such as 844 or 833 gives you more to pick from. In every case, the caller experience is the same.
Who Uses 855 Numbers?
855 numbers are used across almost every industry that fields inbound calls. Typical users include:
- Customer support teams that want a single national number customers can call free of charge.
- Sales and lead-generation lines printed on ads, packaging, and websites.
- Franchises and multi-location businesses that route one toll-free number to the nearest branch.
- Professional services — law firms, clinics, and agencies — that want a polished, location-independent presence.
- E-commerce and remote-first companies with no single storefront to anchor a local number.
Because 855 works everywhere in North America and hides the business's physical location, it is especially useful for companies that serve customers nationwide or want to project a larger footprint than a single-city local number would suggest.
855 Number for Business — Benefits
A 855 toll-free number does more than let customers call for free. It offers several concrete advantages:
- Free for the caller. Removing the cost of the call lifts inbound response to ads, catalogs, and support lines.
- National, professional image. A toll-free number signals an established business rather than a single-location operation.
- Portability. Toll-free numbers move between providers, so you never lose the number printed on your marketing.
- Location independence. Move offices or go fully remote without changing the number customers know.
- Trackability. Toll-free lines are easy to route, record, and measure for call analytics and marketing attribution.
Pair a 855 number with a local phone number to get the best of both — a memorable national line plus local presence in the markets you care about.
How to Get a 855 Number
Getting a 855 toll-free number with DialPhone takes minutes and needs no hardware:
- Start a plan or free trial. DialPhone plans begin at $24 per user per month with a 14-day free trial and no contract.
- Search the 855 inventory. Filter the toll-free number pool for available 855 numbers, including vanity options where available.
- Choose and assign your number. Pick a number and assign it to a user, team, or auto-attendant.
- Configure routing. Set up call flows, an AI receptionist, voicemail, and business hours from the dashboard.
Already have a 855 number elsewhere? DialPhone ports it in for free — see the number porting guide for what to expect.
855 Vanity Numbers
A vanity number spells a word or phrase using the letters on a phone keypad — for example 1-855-GO-DIAL. Vanity toll-free numbers are far easier to remember than a random string of digits, which makes them powerful in advertising.
Because 855 is a newer prefix with a deep pool, more vanity combinations remain available — you have a better chance of securing a phrase that matches your brand.
When you search the 855 inventory during signup, you can look for numbers that spell your company name, a keyword, or a call to action. Keep vanity numbers short and unambiguous — avoid letters that map to easily confused digits.
Is 855 a Scam Number?
855 itself is not a scam. It is a legitimate toll-free prefix used by countless real businesses every day for support and sales.
However, because toll-free numbers are inexpensive and easy to obtain, scammers sometimes use them too — and a toll-free prefix gives no clue about who is really calling. Robocallers and fraud operations can display a 1-855 number just as easily as a genuine company.
Treat any unexpected 855 call that pressures you for payment, passwords, or personal information as suspicious. Hang up, look up the organization's official number independently, and call back. Report suspected fraud to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov.
Features Included
A 855 toll-free number from DialPhone comes with the full business phone platform, not just a number:
- AI receptionist that answers, routes, and screens calls automatically.
- Unlimited US calling and call routing to any device or team.
- Business SMS where supported, so customers can text your published number.
- Call analytics for volume, source, and outcome tracking.
- Voicemail, IVR menus, and business-hours routing configured from one dashboard.
- Free number porting to bring an existing 855 number with you.
Everything runs in the cloud, so you can manage your 855 number from a laptop or mobile app without any on-site equipment.
Pricing
DialPhone toll-free numbers, including 855, start at $24 per user per month on annual billing. Every plan includes a 14-day free trial, no contracts, and free porting of an existing toll-free number.
Pricing covers the full communications platform — the AI receptionist, unlimited US calling, business SMS, and analytics — not just the toll-free line. See the pricing page for a full tier comparison, or start the free trial to claim a 855 number today.
Compare the Toll-Free Prefixes
Exploring which toll-free code is right for you? Each prefix has its own guide:
- 800 toll-free numbers — introduced 1967, the original US toll-free prefix.
- 888 toll-free numbers — introduced 1996, the second toll-free prefix.
- 877 toll-free numbers — introduced 1998, the third toll-free prefix.
- 866 toll-free numbers — introduced 2000, the fourth toll-free prefix.
- 844 toll-free numbers — introduced 2013, the sixth toll-free prefix.
- 833 toll-free numbers — introduced 2017, the newest toll-free prefix.
Or read the complete toll-free numbers overview and the local phone number guide to decide between a national toll-free line and a local presence.