Last-call return, automatic recall, or (on PBX and centrex service) camp-on, is a telecommunication feature offered by telephony service providers to subscribers to provide the subscriber with the telephone number, and sometimes the time, of the last caller. The service may also offer the facility to place a call to the calling party.

The general public tends to refer to the service by the telephone feature code, the telephone number it has in their country; for example, in North America, this is *69, while in the UK, it is called 1471. The New York Times described Call Return in 1992 as a new service.[1] It can be paid for per-call or subscribed to monthly.[1]

Feature code edit

The number for this facility varies with country and provider:

In the UK, after dialing 1471, the caller can press "3" to automatically return the call. Previously free, since August 2004 the return call service incurs a charge.

The service provider may also offer a facility by which the calling party can prevent their number being revealed to the called party, either permanently or on a per-call basis. This is achieved by prefixing the dialed number with:

  • Australia: 1831 on landlines and mobile phones, or #31# from a mobile[5]
  • United Kingdom, Ireland, Isle of Man, and Channel Islands: 141 on landlines and #31# on mobiles
  • United States: *67
  • Sweden: #31#

Conversely, to send the caller number on a line where the number is normally withheld, the following prefixes can be dialed:

  • Australia: 1832 on landlines, or *31# from a mobile
  • Ireland: 142
  • United Kingdom: 1470 (also used in Gibraltar and the Channel Islands)
  • United States: *82
  • Philippines *999

In Gibraltar and formerly in Ireland, ex-directory or unlisted numbers are withheld by default.

In Germany, most contemporary telephones have a specific button functioning as call return, which is an internal function of the telephone itself (the number of the last caller is stored inside the phone at the time of that last call) and thus doesn't have a numeric code.

In Canada, the feature is commonly marketed by telephone companies as a combination of two features:

  • Call again, a form of automatic ring back, allows a caller, on reaching a busy signal, to hang up, dial a special code, and be called back automatically when the called number is no longer busy, usually with a limit of 30 minutes.
  • Call return allows a customer to dial a code that identifies the last incoming call. On some types of central office equipment, it announces the number and offers the call-back option; on others, it simply attempts a connection without an announcement.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Linda Saslow (28 June 1992). "Phone Company Introduces Call Return, Quietly". The New York Times. Retrieved 28 September 2022.
  2. ^ Telstra "Telstra Home Phones and Plans – Call Return" Archived 14 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Optus "Optus Personal – Using Call Return"
  4. ^ "NewsRelease". NTT East. Retrieved 20 June 2013. "Number OSIRASE 136". NTT West. Retrieved 20 June 2013.
  5. ^ "HOW TO: block your number when calling someone". Telstra Exchange. Telstra. Retrieved 28 May 2017.

External links edit