Update: New "Grantee Codes" to be Issued as of May 1, 2013

In June of last year, we reported that the FCC had decided to begin using five-character “grantee codes” in connection with its equipment certifications. (The problem was that the Commission was running out of the three-character codes it had historically used.) It took a couple of months for that decision to become technically “effective”. And, apparently, it has taken yet another eight months actually to implement the new format.

We know that because the Commission’s Office of Engineering and Technology, which is in charge of the equipment certification program, has announced that it’s going to start issuing five-character grantee codes as of May 1, 2013. From that date on, grantee codes – also known as FCC identifiers or FCC ID’s – will consist of “an Arabic numeral between two and nine followed by four alphanumeric characters (capital letters or Arabic numerals between two and nine).” Check out our post from last June for more information.

Effective Date Set for New Grantee Codes

Rules that vastly increase numbers of available codes take effect on August 24.

The expansion of “grantee codes” (issued by the FCC in connection with equipment certifications) will take effect on August 24, 2012, according to a notice published in the Federal Register. This will have no effect on any current regulatees – it’s more of an internal housekeeping matter for the FCC, designed to give the Commission a greater resource of codes to issue in the future. (As we previously reported, thanks in no small measure to the success of the wireless device industry in the U.S., the FCC foresees running out of grantee codes.) So if you happen to receive a grantee code after August 24 and it looks different from the codes you’re used to seeing (because it has more characters and starts with a numeral), don’t fret – it’s just the new system kicking in.

FCC Expands Certification "Grantee Codes"

The need for a change reflects the very large number of players in the U.S. wireless device market.

We’ve been hearing for years about the growth of wireless technologies into every facet of our lives. Now we have proof, of a sort.

Every U.S. consumer product that contains a radio transmitter – a universe that includes car keys, Wi-Fi tablets, Bluetooth earpieces, cell phones, baby monitors, and much more – must be labeled with an “FCC ID,” a string of usually random-looking letters and numerals. This signifies the device has been certified as complying with FCC technical standards. The same certification is also required for most non-consumer radio-based devices that are mobile, portable, or unlicensed. (You can find the FCC ID on the underside of a wireless mouse or laptop, the lower back of an iPad or iPhone, or under the battery of an Android phone. Once you have it, you can pull up a lot of technical information at this web page.)

The FCC ID has two parts. The first three characters, called the “grantee code,” identify the company that obtained FCC certification, usually the manufacturer. Current grantee codes must start with a letter. Apple, for example, has code BCG; Microsoft has C3K. There are over 33,000 possible combinations. The rest of the characters, up to 14 of them, are chosen by the company, usually to denote a particular model of device.

The FCC is running out of grantee codes.

That is, in the near future, the number of companies holding FCC certifications will overtake the possible three-character combinations. Some of the previously issued codes, to be sure, went to companies that are no longer in business; the numbering system goes back to 1979. And until 1996, personal computers and peripheral devices had to be certified, which ate up additional codes. Still, on the whole, we think the coming exhaustion of codes speaks to the enormous success of the wireless-device industry in the United States.

But enough of the past. Going forward, the FCC will need more codes. The solution? New applicants will soon receive five-character codes. Each will begin with a numeral, to distinguish these from the old, three-character codes. (Zeros and ones will not be used.) The number of possible new codes, says the FCC, is over 8 million. At the current rate of assignment, approximately 1,000 codes per year, the FCC should be in good shape through the year 10,000 A.D. Not taking any chances, though, the FCC will no longer specify the length of the code in the rules, so it can expand beyond the upcoming five characters without the formalities of a rule amendment.

Holders of the current three-character codes can continue to use them indefinitely, and indeed, must use them when applying for new certifications.

The new system will take effect without the usual notice and comment, 30 days after publication in the Federal Register. We will let you know when that happens.