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What Is Number Porting and How Does It Work?

Number porting moves your business phone number from one carrier to another. The legal basis, the real timeline, and what causes failed ports.

Netexem TeamEditorial
7 min read
Stylized illustration of a phone number being transferred between two carriers
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Number porting moves your business phone number from one carrier to another. The legal basis, the real timeline, and what causes failed ports.

If you are changing phone carriers, the question "can I keep my number" is usually the first thing customers ask. The answer is almost always yes, thanks to a federal regulation that has been in place for two decades. But the process — called Local Number Portability, or LNP — has real rules, real timelines, and real ways to go wrong. This post explains exactly how porting works and what to do to make it succeed the first time.

In 2003, the FCC mandated Local Number Portability for wireless carriers. The rule was later extended to wireline numbers. The principle is simple: your phone number belongs to you, not to the carrier, and any carrier you switch to must be able to bring the number with you within a reasonable window.

The mechanics work through a national database called the Number Portability Administration Center (NPAC). When a new carrier wants to bring a number in, they submit an electronic request to NPAC, the current carrier ("losing carrier" in industry jargon) verifies the request matches their records, and on a scheduled date the routing flips. The actual cutover takes minutes; the paperwork takes days.

The federal protections are real:

  • The losing carrier cannot refuse to release a number just because they don't want to lose you
  • The losing carrier cannot charge you to release the number
  • Wireless numbers must port within one business day
  • Wireline numbers must port within seven business days (most carriers default to longer windows for batches)

If a losing carrier slow-walks a port unreasonably, the gaining carrier can escalate to the FCC's complaint process. We have had to do this exactly twice in the last few years; both times the port closed within forty-eight hours of the FCC notice.

The real timeline

Federal minimums are not the same as carrier defaults. In practice, here is what to expect:

Port typeRealistic windowNotes
Single wireless number1–3 business daysMost carriers process in 24 hours once submitted
Single landline-to-VoIP7–14 business daysLargest variability — depends on losing carrier responsiveness
2–10 landline numbers10–14 business daysCoordinated batch port; one cutover for the whole group
15–50 lines2–4 weeksMore paperwork; often requires letter of agency notarization
Complex (legacy PRI, multi-state)4–8 weeksEach piece needs separate handling
Toll-free numbers3–5 business daysRespOrg change, different process entirely

The biggest variable is how fast the losing carrier responds. Some incumbents process porting requests within 24 hours; others sit on them for the full federal-deadline window because they are still hoping to retain you.

Step-by-step: how the port actually happens

Here is exactly what we do for a typical small business landline-to-VoIP port:

Step 1: Letter of Authorization (LOA). You sign a one-page document authorizing us to act as your representative for the port. It lists every number being ported and the losing carrier's account information.

Step 2: Bill image. You send us a recent invoice from the losing carrier. This is non-optional in our process even when "not technically required" — it eliminates the most common rejection cause by giving us the exact account number, billing address, and authorized contact name as they appear on the carrier's records.

Step 3: Port request submitted. We file the electronic port request through NPAC. The losing carrier has a Firm Order Commitment (FOC) window to confirm — usually 24 to 72 hours.

Step 4: FOC date confirmed. The losing carrier sends back a confirmed port date. We typically schedule the actual cutover for the evening of that date so business hours stay clean.

Step 5: Cutover. At the scheduled moment, NPAC flips the routing. Calls to your number now arrive at our switch instead of the losing carrier's. The whole switch takes about ten minutes.

Step 6: Verification. We call the number from an external line to confirm routing. We have your phones placing test outbound calls within the hour. If anything is wrong, we have NPAC escalation paths to fix it within 24 hours.

Why ports get rejected

The losing carrier has a narrow set of legitimate reasons to reject a port request:

  1. Name/address mismatch. The most common rejection. The name on the request must match the name on the losing carrier's account exactly. "Jane Doe" vs. "Jane M. Doe" can trigger rejection. Suite numbers, abbreviations, even punctuation can matter.
  2. Account number wrong. Many small businesses don't know their carrier account number. It is on every bill but is often missed during data collection.
  3. Pending change on the account. If the losing carrier has a pending order on the line (new feature, address change, billing change), the port is blocked until the pending change closes.
  4. Number is shared with other services. A landline that also carries a fax machine in a shared hunt group may need group dissolution first.
  5. Active fraud hold. If the losing carrier has flagged the account for non-payment or suspected fraud, the port is blocked until the hold clears.

The good news: rejections are recoverable. The new carrier reschedules the port after fixing the cause. The customer-facing impact is usually a one-week delay, not a permanent blocker.

If you are planning a switch, our contact page has a quick-start form that asks for the exact things we need to file the porting paperwork on day one.

Toll-free numbers are different

Toll-free numbers (800, 888, 877, 866, 855, 844, 833) live in a separate national database called SMS/800 (now operated by Somos). They are not "owned" by a phone carrier; they are managed by a Responsible Organization, or RespOrg. Porting a toll-free number means changing the RespOrg pointer.

The mechanics:

  1. You file a RespOrg change request with the new carrier
  2. The new carrier submits the change to Somos
  3. The current RespOrg has a window to release (or contest) the change
  4. Once released, the change processes in three to five business days

Toll-free ports are usually faster than local landline ports because the process is centralized, but the paperwork is slightly more involved. Bring the existing toll-free number's RespOrg ID and a recent invoice and the process is straightforward.

What we do that DIY ports miss

A small business doing a port for the first time often discovers one of these things the hard way:

  • The port request is submitted with the wrong account name and gets rejected on day five
  • The cutover is scheduled at 2pm on a Wednesday and the office goes dark during business hours
  • The losing carrier's "we'll port it next Friday" turns into "we'll port it three weeks from Friday" with no escalation path
  • The wireless port (1-day federal max) takes a week because the customer didn't know they could push back

We handle the paperwork, watch for rejections, schedule cutovers for off-hours, and escalate when carriers slow-walk. The customer's job is to send us one invoice image and sign one LOA.

The bottom line

Number porting is your federal right. The process is well-defined and reliable when the paperwork is done correctly. Expect seven to fourteen business days for a typical small business port, plan the cutover for after-hours, send a clean copy of a recent bill with the request, and most ports complete on the first try without drama.

If you are thinking about switching carriers and want to know exactly what a port will look like for your numbers, we will pull a sample paperwork pack and walk through it with you before anything is signed.

Number PortingVoIPSwitching CarriersFCC
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Netexem Team

Editorial

We are the team that installs business phone and internet across California. Every article reflects what we see in the field. More about us →

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