Donate SIGN UP

why are 0870 numbers to go, but not 0871

Avatar Image
David H | 21:35 Mon 14th Apr 2008 | Computers
3 Answers
What was the point of Ofcom stopping businesses using 0870 numbers soon if they continue to allow 0871, so many will just switch to a number that costs even more? It appears to show they have no interest in stopping revenue sharing, they just want to simplify it and not protect the consumers, quite the reverse in fact.
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 3 of 3rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by David H. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
this website is useful for either

http://www.saynoto0870.com/
Question Author
Thanks jno, I have been using that to find the odd alternative number (which I hope they'll continue to do for 0871), I'll check and see if they can explain why revenue sharing hasn't simply been banned, and also see if anyone here has any inside information.
0844 and 0871 are revenue share numbers introduced in 2000.

0845 and 0870 have a much longer history (especially if you include their earlier 0345, 0645, 0990 and 0541 versions).

0845 and 0844 look similar but are different types of number. 0870 and 0871 look similar but are different types of number. Ofcom messed up here. They should have used 083 and 086 or some other number range for the new numbers to differentiate them from 0845 and 0870.

Since 2009, the 0870 numbers are "inclusive" in call plans. If you have free minutes to 01 and 02 from a landline, then 0870 are included too - otherwise you still pay for the call. 0870 used to be "revenue share" with the call price capped at the equivalent of a national call. Ofcom removed revenue share in 2009 and added the "inclusive" requirement. Mobile operators still charge for these calls.

0845 are also revenue share. They used to be capped at the price of a local call. Since 2004, no provider offers a cheaper rate for local calls, there's just one national or "geographic" rate. "Local rate" no longer exists. Further, most landline providers allow all 01 and 02 calls free within inclusive minutes.

BT thought that Ofcom were about to remove revenue share from 0845 so also made those calls inclusive in 2009. 0845 is still revenue share so BT has to subsidise those calls. Their mistake!

0844 has always been revenue share. These are NEVER usable within inclusive minutes. This is also true for 0871, 0843, and 0872. From a landline, the price varies according to the number called. A little known fact is that when you pay BT for a call to one of these numbers they pass all of the money on. The call price is the same as the revenue share. BT are not allowed to make a profit on these calls. Other providers are allowed to make a profit and do charge more for them.

Mobile operators charge 30 to 45p per min to call 084 and 087 numbers. They make a large profit on these calls.

Rules are changing in the next few months. 0870 will return to revenue share. 0845 and 0870 will no longer be inclusive from BT landlines. This will happen in early 2013.

That sounds like a bad thing, but there's more.

Businesses using 084 and 087 numbers for customer service and other similar functions will have to move to the equivalent 034 and 037 numbers. 03 numbers cost the same as 01 and 02 numbers and are usuable in inclusive minutes from both landlines and mobiles alike. This is forced by the Consumer Rights Directive.

Businesses that continue to use 084 and 087 numbers will have to declare the revenue share amount that is included in the price of calls to their number. This will be forced by the new "unbundled tariffs" that Ofcom propose.

The end result is that 084 and 087 will clearly be seen to be revenue share numbers and 03 will be "inclusive" numbers that are effectively "free" for most callers and the same price as 01 and 02 for those that have to pay (i.e. from mobiles on pay as you go and landlines with no inclusive-calls bundle).

The revenue share amounts are listed here: http://www.ofcom.org.uk/static/numbering/s8_code.txt

See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-geographic_telephone_numbers_in_the_United_Kingdom#History_of_non-geographic_prefixes

The move to 03 numbers is significant. It means that mobile users will benefit too. Previous changes to 0870 and the like have only benefitted landline users.

1 to 3 of 3rss feed

Do you know the answer?

why are 0870 numbers to go, but not 0871

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.