Area Code

801 Area Code: Utah's Original Wasatch Front Code

Utah's Wasatch Front — Salt Lake City, Ogden, and Provo — uses the 801 area code, joined by the 385 overlay since 2008. Full coverage details inside.

Akil Patel

Senior Writer

Jul 03, 20265 min read
Share
Light blue banner showing a Utah silhouette with the Wasatch Front region highlighted and stat pills for coverage, overlay, and Mountain Time

The 801 area code covers Utah's Wasatch Front — Salt Lake City, Ogden, and Provo — and has done so since 1947, when it was assigned to the entire state. Utah has since narrowed its footprint twice: 435 split off the rest of the state in 1997, and 385 overlaid the same Wasatch Front territory in 2008. Unlike most of the region-wide codes in this guide series, 801 runs on Mountain Time.

This guide covers exactly where 801 reaches, the split-then-overlay history that shaped Utah's numbering plan, whether you should pick 801 or 385, and what's driving the Wasatch Front's steady number demand.

Where the 801 area code reaches

Table-style graphic listing Salt Lake City, Provo, Layton, and Ogden with their counties across the Wasatch Front

The 801 area code location covers the Wasatch Front — Utah's most densely populated corridor, running along the base of the Wasatch Range.

801 coverage:

CountyKey cities
Salt LakeSalt Lake City, West Valley City, Sandy
UtahProvo, Orem
DavisLayton, Bountiful
WeberOgden

What 801 does NOT cover:

  • Eastern & southern Utah, including St. George → 435
  • Idaho, just north → 208
  • Wyoming, to the northeast → 307
  • Nevada, to the west → 775

From statewide code to a split-then-overlay history

Timeline graphic showing three milestones: 1947 original statewide code, 1997 split creating 435, and 2008 385 overlay activated

1947801 was assigned to cover the entire state of Utah, one of the original North American area codes.

September 21, 1997435 split off, taking eastern and southern Utah and leaving 801 with just the Wasatch Front corridor.

June 1, 2008385 was added as an all-services overlay on the same Wasatch Front territory, with mandatory ten-digit dialing statewide starting June 1, 2009. Existing 801 numbers were left untouched.

Should you choose 801 or 385?

Side-by-side comparison graphic showing 801 and 385 cards with identical Wasatch Front coverage, differing only in issue year

Since 385 is an overlay rather than a separate region, the two codes are functionally identical — same Wasatch Front territory, same rates, same local calling area. The choice mostly comes down to availability: choose 801 if a specific legacy prefix is still open and recognizability matters, or choose 385 if you just need a working local number, since 801 prefixes have grown scarcer as the region has filled in.

Ready when you are

Protect your business line.

MCM's local numbers ship with verified caller ID and smart call filtering — customers always know it's really you, and spam never reaches your team.

Get your local number

What's driving demand along the Wasatch Front

Editorial stat graphic titled What's Growing the Wasatch Front's Number Demand, with rows for the Silicon Slopes tech corridor, Salt Lake City International Airport, and higher education

The Wasatch Front's economy has diversified well beyond its early mining and rail roots:

Silicon Slopes The tech corridor stretching from Salt Lake City through Provo and Lehi has become one of the country's fastest-growing startup and software hubs, adding office lines every year.

Salt Lake City International Airport A major Delta Air Lines hub, the airport anchors a large logistics and travel-industry workforce across the region.

Higher education The University of Utah and Brigham Young University both drive steady demand for student and staff lines each academic year.

Many of these Wasatch Front businesses are moving their phone systems onto UCaaS (Unified Communications as a Service) — one cloud platform for calling, video, and messaging that scales as a company adds locations across the corridor, the same pattern behind newer overlays like 785 in Kansas. Contact us to set up an 801 or 385 number for your Utah business.

Number availability along the 801/385 overlay

Unlike several long-runway codes covered elsewhere in this guide series, the combined 801/385 pool has been drawing down steadily — recent estimates put roughly two-thirds of forecasted number blocks already assigned. That's still healthy headroom, but it reflects the Wasatch Front's continued growth more directly than codes with runways stretching decades or centuries out.

Time zone & how to dial an 801 number

The Wasatch Front runs on Mountain Time (MT) — MST (UTC −7) in winter, MDT (UTC −6) during Daylight Saving Time. Local calls within the 801/385 overlay require all ten digits: dial 1, then the area code, then the seven-digit number.

Key takeaways

  • 801 covers Utah's Wasatch Front — Salt Lake City, Ogden, and Provo — one of the original 1947 area codes.
  • 435 split off the rest of Utah in 1997; 385 overlaid the same Wasatch Front territory in 2008.
  • Roughly two-thirds of the combined 801/385 number pool is already assigned.
  • Time zone: Mountain (MT) throughout.

Ready when you are

Ready to sound local everywhere you sell?

MCM activates business numbers in minutes, with call routing, analytics, and CRM-ready integrations. Start your free trial — no card to browse inventory.

Start your free trial

Frequently asked questions

What is the 801 area code?

It covers Utah's Wasatch Front, including Salt Lake City, Ogden, and Provo. It's one of the original 1947 area codes, later joined by an overlay, 385.

Where is the 801 area code located?

Utah's Wasatch Front corridor — Salt Lake, Utah, Davis, and Weber counties, running along the base of the Wasatch Range.

Is 801 a California area code?

No. It has never been assigned to California — this is strictly a Utah code.

What state is the 801 area code in?

Utah — specifically the Wasatch Front, including Salt Lake City.

What time zone is the 801 area code?

Mountain Time Zone (MT) — MST (UTC −7) in winter and MDT (UTC −6) during Daylight Saving Time.

Should I get an 801 or 385 number?

Both cover identical territory with identical rates. Choose 801 if a legacy prefix is still available; choose 385 if you just need a working local number.

How do I get an 801 area code number?

Sign up with a VoIP provider such as My Country Mobile, search for available numbers in either code, choose a Wasatch Front prefix, select a plan, and activate.

Written by

Akil Patel

Senior Writer

Akil writes the MCM field guides on phone numbers, dialing rules, and area-code references used by ops teams across North America.

Try the platform. Be on a call by lunch.

Same product, same support, same security — no matter which plan you pick.