Area Code 539 — Tulsa, Oklahoma

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About Area Code 539

Region Code
539
City
Tulsa
State
Oklahoma
Population
1,500,000
Largest City
Tulsa
Neighboring Codes
  • 405/572 (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma)
  • 580 (Lawton, Oklahoma)
  • 620 (Hutchinson, Kansas)
  • 417 (Springfield, Missouri)
  • 479 (Fayetteville, Arkansas)
Time Zone
Central Time

Map of Area Code 539

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History & Cultural Notes

Numbering relief reached northeastern Oklahoma when area code 539 was approved in 2010 and activated in 2011 as an all-services overlay to long-standing 918 centered on Tulsa. The change instituted mandatory 10‑digit dialing while allowing existing numbers to remain. Its parent code traces to a 1953 split from 405, mirroring postwar growth tied to oil, refining, and rail. Overlay planning anticipated continued demand from mobile lines, VoIP services, and suburban expansion across the region’s cities, small towns, and tribal jurisdictions.

  • Energy and petrochemicals: legacy oil majors, pipelines, midstream headquarters, and refineries.
  • Aerospace and maintenance: airline MRO in Tulsa, parts manufacturing, and flight training.
  • Logistics and manufacturing: the Tulsa Port of Catoosa and firms along the Arkansas River system.
  • Tribal governments and enterprises: Cherokee Nation (Tahlequah) and Muscogee Nation (Okmulgee) cultural and economic roles.
  • Higher education and arts philanthropy supporting research, museums, and performance spaces.

Tulsa’s Art Deco core, Route 66 corridor, and the “Tulsa Sound” associated with artists like J.J. Cale and Leon Russell inform a distinct regional identity. Venues such as Cain’s Ballroom and the Woody Guthrie Center anchor music history, while powwows and heritage events underscore Indigenous presence. The mix of prairie and wooded hills—often labeled Green Country—frames outdoor festivals and riverfront gathering places, reflecting a balance of industry, cultural institutions, and community life across northeastern Oklahoma.