SMS short codes are 5- or 6-digit numbers used for high-volume texting.
They are common in marketing, authentication, alerts, and two-way keyword campaigns.
Why short codes exist
Short codes are designed for messaging throughput and campaign recognition.
Compared with long numbers, they are:
- easier for users to remember,
- optimized for large-scale send patterns,
- useful for keyword-driven flows (
,,).
Dedicated vs shared short code
| Model | Best for | Risk profile |
|---|---|---|
| Dedicated short code | Brands with sustained volume and strict control needs | Higher setup and ownership overhead |
| Shared short code | Historically lower cost entry | Cross-tenant compliance and deliverability risk |
Shared short codes are significantly less favored today in many ecosystems due to compliance and abuse concerns.
Short code vs 10DLC vs toll-free
| Number type | Typical use | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Short code | Very high-volume campaigns and keyword programs | Strong throughput profile, higher onboarding rigor |
| 10DLC | A2P application messaging | Good default for many business messaging cases |
| Toll-free | Customer support and transactional traffic | Broad utility and simpler recognition in some markets |
Choose by message type, throughput requirement, compliance burden, and geography.
Compliance rules matter more than number type
Regardless of channel, you need:
- explicit consent records,
- clear opt-out behavior (
flows), - content policy controls,
- sender identity consistency.
One policy violation can impact deliverability and campaign continuity.
Implementation checklist
- Map each message stream to an approved use case.
- Separate marketing and critical transactional paths.
- Implement opt-in and opt-out audit logs.
- Add template governance for regulated keywords.
- Monitor carrier error codes and opt-out trends.
Common mistakes
- treating all messaging traffic as one campaign type,
- weak consent evidence,
- poor handling of unsubscribe keywords,
- no fallback path when send route degrades.
Related routes
Final take
Short codes are powerful for scale, but governance and compliance determine long-term success. Build routing, consent, and monitoring systems before volume ramps up.
