Regex for US phone number
North American phone in any common format.
The pattern
^\+?1?[-.\s]?\(?\d{3}\)?[-.\s]?\d{3}[-.\s]?\d{4}$
What it matches
555-123-4567(555) 123-4567+1 555 123 4567555.123.45675551234567
What it doesn't match
+44 20 7946 0958555-1234123-456-789
Notes & gotchas
Accepts US/Canadian numbers with optional country code, parens around area code, and various separators. For international, use libphonenumber.
Code in your language
Use the explainer's Code tab to generate ready-to-paste snippets in JavaScript, Python, Java, .NET, Go, Ruby, and PHP for this pattern.
Open in explainer →About this pattern
Identifying and validating user identity (names, contact info, IDs) is one of the most common reasons developers reach for regex. The pattern below handles the format check; for full validation always confirm against a source of truth (database, API, or document).
Quick usage in different languages
Once you've validated a candidate value matches this pattern, you'll typically use it inside your application code. Each language has its own regex syntax:
- JavaScript:
new RegExp(pattern).test(value) - Python:
re.match(pattern, value)with raw strings:r"pattern" - Java:
Pattern.compile(pattern).matcher(value).matches() - C# / .NET:
Regex.IsMatch(value, pattern) - Go:
regexp.MustCompile(pattern).MatchString(value)— Go uses RE2 so some advanced features aren't available - Ruby:
value =~ /pattern/orpattern.match?(value) - PHP:
preg_match('/pattern/', $value)
The explainer's Code tab generates these for any pattern you paste — including the right escaping and idioms for each language.
Common pitfalls
- Anchors matter. If the pattern uses
^and$it expects the entire input to match. To find this pattern inside a longer text, remove the anchors and use the/gflag. - Case sensitivity. Letter ranges like
[A-Z]only match uppercase. Use theiflag or[A-Za-z]for case-insensitive matching. - Escape user input. If you're building a regex from a string variable, escape regex metacharacters first to avoid bugs or injection.
- Performance. For this specific pattern the risk is low, but be cautious of nested quantifiers when adapting it — they can cause exponential backtracking on adversarial input.
See also
Browse all 300 patterns in the library, or open this regex in the interactive explainer for a token-by-token breakdown, live testing, and code in seven languages.
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