The clickable map · OHS makes better maps™

The Area-Code Map.

Every code below is a pin — tap it and the metro opens in Google Maps. But notice what's not here: no embedded Google map watching you scroll. We hand you the door; we don't let the tracker into the room. That's the whole "better maps" joke — ours don't look back at you.

Three digits are a confession. Here's the map of what your number gives away.

You already know 231, 503, and 517. Here are the majors — tap any pin to drop into Google Maps, no tracker attached:

🏠 Michigan — home turf
🌽 The Midwest
🗽 Northeast & the Capital
🤠 The South & Texas
🌅 The West & Pacific
Where the house stands. A real, useful map — and a lesson. The privacy point: those three digits announce roughly where you live before you've said a word (that's what the consent page and the privacy-lock egg are about — type a 10-digit number anywhere on the site and watch). We link out to Google Maps instead of embedding it, on purpose: the strict no-tracking policy here won't load a third-party tracker, so the map can't watch you back. Codes shown are major metros stated only where we're confident; some areas have several overlay codes, and a few numbers (mobile, ported) don't match their region — a code is a strong hint, not a GPS. The one rule holds: no lying.

Tap-through goes to Google Maps (maps.google.com). Sister rooms: the Museum Map · Did You Really Agree?