Alaska Business Phone Numbers
A real (907) number tells customers you're rooted in the Last Frontier, whether you're answering calls from Anchorage or Ketchikan. Alaska uses just one area code statewide, so that prefix carries a lot of weight.
Get a Alaska NumberAlaska at a Glance
Alaska runs on small business. More than 73,000 small firms operate across the state, and they make up over 90% of all registered entities [1]. When your shop, lodge, or contracting outfit has a (907) number on the truck, you're signaling that you're part of that fabric, not a call center somewhere in the Lower 48.
Tourism shapes a huge part of the rhythm here. Visitors pour nearly $4 billion in direct spending into the state each year, and cruise traffic now runs about 30% above pre-pandemic levels [2]. If you run a charter, a B&B, or a guide service, summer phones don't stop ringing, and missed calls turn into missed bookings fast.
The flip side is the Alaska Time Zone, which puts you four hours behind New York and an hour behind the West Coast. A Tonet number lets you forward calls to a mobile, route Outside customers to whoever is awake, and keep voicemails transcribed so nothing slips while you're out on the water or on a back road with one bar of service.
Alaska Area Codes
Alaska is one of a handful of states that still gets by on a single area code. Every landline and most local mobile numbers carry the (907) prefix, from Utqiagvik down to Ketchikan.
Major Cities in Alaska
Most of the state's commerce flows through three hubs: Anchorage for trade and logistics, Fairbanks for the Interior, and Ketchikan as the southeast gateway. A (907) number works the same in any of them.
Phone Features Built for Alaska Businesses
Spotty service, seasonal swings, and long distances mean your phone system has to do more than just ring. Here's what comes standard with Tonet.
Auto Attendant
Route callers to the right person without paying someone to sit at a front desk. Helpful when your office is a pickup truck.
Call Recording
Save every quote, dispatch call, and customer conversation. Handy when a job spans months and your memory doesn't.
AI Transcription
Voicemails arrive as readable text. Skim them between flights, jobs, or stops on the Parks Highway.
Business SMS
Text bookings, updates, and confirmations from your (907) number. Customers prefer it, especially in remote areas with weak voice signal.
Mobile App
Take calls on your cell while keeping your business number private. Works on iOS and Android, even on patchy LTE.
Daily Billing
Plans start at $10 per user per month, billed daily. No contracts, so seasonal operators only pay for the months they're open.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I get a (907) number if my business isn't physically in Alaska?
Yes. Tonet lets you pick a (907) number whether you're in Anchorage or Atlanta. A lot of Lower 48 companies serving Alaska customers do this to look local.
How much does an Alaska business number cost?
Plans start at $10 per user per month, billed daily. Extra numbers are $2.50 each per month. No contracts, no setup fees.
Will it work in remote parts of Alaska with weak cell service?
The Tonet app works over any internet connection, including satellite and rural LTE. As long as you have data, you can take calls.
Can I keep my existing (907) number?
Yes. Number porting from your current carrier is included, and it usually takes a couple of weeks.
Does it handle the Alaska time zone correctly?
Yes. You can set business hours in Alaska Time, and the auto attendant will route after-hours calls to voicemail or another number automatically.
Plant your (907) flag with Tonet
Pick a number, port your old one, or add a second line for the busy season. Setup takes about ten minutes.
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