Dallas–Fort Worth
Six codes blanket the largest metro in the South — from downtown Dallas to the Fort Worth Stockyards.
From a 214 in Dallas to a 713 in Houston, a 512 in Austin or a 915 in El Paso — get a local Texas number that sounds like you have been on the block for years. Live in minutes, no hardware, no carrier ticket.
Texas is too big for one phone prefix. Find the region you want a presence in, then claim the exact code your customers recognize.
Six codes blanket the largest metro in the South — from downtown Dallas to the Fort Worth Stockyards.
The fourth-largest US city runs on four overlapping codes, with the Golden Triangle and Brazos Valley alongside.
Three codes cover the Alamo City and the Hill Country gateways stretching west to the border.
The fastest-growing major US city — a 512 number still signals home-grown Austin credibility.
From the Permian Basin oilfields to El Paso on the Rio Grande and the Panhandle plains.
The Gulf Coast and the Rio Grande Valley — Corpus Christi, McAllen, Laredo and College Station.
The I-35 corridor between the big metros and the Piney Woods of deep East Texas.
Local caller ID is the single biggest lever on answer rates. A familiar Texas code tells a customer you are nearby and worth picking up — long before they hear a word.
Claim your Texas numberA local 214 or 713 lands as a neighbor, not "spam likely." Familiar caller ID lifts pickups across every Texas metro.
Pick a code, verify your identity, and start taking calls — no carrier ticket, no desk phones, no waiting on hardware.
Calls ride carrier-grade routes with full attestation, so your Texas number is trusted as a real business line.
Port in, port out, no lock-in — with recording, IVR, and the AI assistant on every Texas line you run.
Choose the Texas metro and area code your customers already recognize — 214, 713, 512, 210 or any of the 27.
Complete quick identity verification. No carrier ticket, no desk phones, no Friday-afternoon delays.
Start taking calls and texts the same day, with recording, IVR, and the AI assistant on every line.
We swapped our 800 number for a 713 and a 281 and inbound pickups from Houston customers jumped within the first week. People trust a local code.
Our Austin 512 line sets us apart from the out-of-state vendors cold-calling our prospects. It says we are part of the city, not parachuting in.
We run support from three states but every Texas customer sees a Dallas 214. The routing just handles it — nobody can tell we are remote.
Texas has 27 active area codes — more than any state except California. They are spread across seven metro regions, from the Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex and Greater Houston to El Paso, the Rio Grande Valley, and the Panhandle. Fast-growing metros like Austin and San Antonio now run overlay codes on the same geography.
Pick the code that matches the city your customers know you for. A 214 reads as established Dallas, 713 as core Houston, 512 as home-grown Austin, and 210 as San Antonio. If you serve a whole metro, any of its codes works — callers recognize the region, not the exact overlay.
No. Ajoxi numbers route over the internet, so you can hold a Dallas 214 or Houston 713 number from anywhere in the world and still show a local Texas caller ID. Nothing about your physical location changes how the number looks to the people you call.
Almost all of Texas runs on Central Time. The far-western tip around El Paso (915) sits in Mountain Time. Ajoxi applies business-hours and routing rules automatically for each number, so a Central-time office and an El Paso line behave correctly without any manual setup.
Yes. Beyond the big four metros, Ajoxi provisions numbers across Waco and Killeen (254), Tyler and Longview (903), Corpus Christi (361), the Permian Basin (432), Lubbock and Amarillo (806), and the Rio Grande Valley (956) — each with instant activation and clean caller ID.
Provision a local number on any of the 27 Texas area codes — instant activation, clean caller ID, Tier-1 routing, and no setup fees.