List of issuer identification numbers for the international telecommunication charge card (ITU-T E.118).
Note
Last update: 2024-12-20
Important
Up-to-date with the ITU-T E.118 Issuer Identifier Numbers database and also includes E.164 shared country code entries (which has some overlapping entries).
Data source as Google Spreadsheet.
Since E.118's issuer identification number is of variable length (it can be 4–7 digits) an ICCID (the serial number of SIM cards) needs to be matched against a list of known IINs in order to determine the SIM issuer.
npm install e118-iin-list
import { identifyIssuer } from "e118-iin-list";
const issuer = identifyIssuer("89450421180216254864");
if (issuer !== undefined) {
console.log(issuer.companyName); // Telia Sonera A/S
}
You can identify issuers directly from your command line:
$ npx e118-iin-list 89450421180216254864
{
"iin": 894504,
"countryCode": 45,
"issuerIdentifierNumber": "04",
"countryName": "Denmark",
"companyName": "Telia Sonera A/S"
}
Note: if your ICCID is not recognized, please open a new issue in this repository.
ITU-T Recommendation E.118 Card numbering structure (Source)
The numbering of the card to be issued by OAs shall be as follows based on ISO/IEC 7812-1 (Identification cards – Identification of issuers – Part 1: Numbering system) and ISO/IEC 7812-2 (Identification cards – Identification of issuers – Part 2: Application and registration procedures).
The maximum length of the visible card number (primary account number) shall be 19 characters and is composed of the following subparts (see Figure 1):
- Major Industry Identifier (MII);
- country code;
- issuer identifier;
- individual account identification number;
- parity check digit computed according to the Luhn formula (see ISO/IEC 7812-1, Annex B). In addition to the parity check digit, OAs may incorporate a validation check device in some location on the card which could be changed when new cards are issued.
- the Major Industry Identifier (MII) is always
89
(telecommunication purposes) - the Country Code is a positive integer (no leading zeros)
- the Issuer Identifier (IIN) is a string (it has leading zeros) and can be
entirely made up of
0
Sources:
- https://www.itu.int/net/itu-t/inrdb/secured/e118iin.aspx
- http://www.itu.int/net/itu-t/inrdb/e164_intlsharedcc.aspx?cc=881,882,883
Process:
- Export the database as Excel spreadsheet and copy and past the table into a Google Spreadsheet
- Export list of shared country codes (E.164) from
http://www.itu.int/net/itu-t/inrdb/e164_intlsharedcc.aspx?cc=881,882,883 and
filter out
CRS
records (inactive), add to the spreadsheet - Export that to CSV and store it as
list.csv
- Convert to JSON using
npm run convert