The international mobile subscriber identity is a number that uniquely identifies every user of a cellular network. It is stored as a field and is sent by the mobile device to the network. It is also used for acquiring other details of the mobile in the home location register or as locally copied in the visitor location register. To prevent eavesdroppers from identifying and tracking the subscriber on the radio interface, the IMSI is sent as rarely as possible and a randomly-generated TMSI is sent instead. The IMSI is used in anymobile network that interconnects with other networks. For GSM, UMTS and LTE networks, this number was provisioned in the SIM card and for cdmaOne and CDMA2000 networks, in the phone directly or in the R-UIM card. Both cards have been superseded by the UICC. An IMSI is usually presented as a 15-digit number but can be shorter. For example, MTN South Africa's old IMSIs that are still in use in the market are 14 digits long. The first 3 digits represent the mobile country code, which is followed by the mobile network code, either 2-digit or 3-digit. The length of the MNC depends on the value of the MCC, and it is recommended that the length is uniform within a MCC area. The remaining digits are the mobile subscription identification number within the network's customer base, usually 9 to 10 digits long, depending on the length of the MNC. The IMSI conforms to the ITU E.212 numbering standard. IMSIs can sometimes be mistaken for the ICCID, which is the identifier for the physical SIM card itself. The IMSI lives as part of the profile on the SIM/ICCID.
Examples of IMSI numeric presentation
IMSI analysis
IMSI analysis is the process of examining a subscriber's IMSI to identify the network the IMSI belongs to, and whether subscribers from that network may use a given network. If the subscriber is not from the provider's network, the IMSI must be converted to a Global Title, which can then be used for accessing the subscriber's data in the remote HLR. This is mainly important for international mobile roaming. Outside North America, the IMSI is converted to the Mobile Global Title format, standard E.214, which is similar to an E.164 number. E.214 provides a method to convert the IMSI into a number that can be used for routing to international SS7 switches. E.214 can be interpreted as implying that there are two separate stages of conversion; first determine the MCC and convert to E.164 country calling code then determine MNC and convert to national network code for the carrier's network. But this process is not used in practice and the GSM numbering authority has clearly stated that a one-stage process is used . In North America, the IMSI is directly converted to an E.212 number with no modification of its value. This can be routed directly on American SS7 networks. After this conversion, SCCP is used to send the message to its final destination. For details, see Global Title Translation.
Therefore, 284011234567890 becomes 359881234567890 under the E.214 numbering plan. Translation rule:
match numbers starting 310150 '
remove first six digits '
prepend 14054 '
mark the number as having E.214 numbering plan.
route message on Global Title across SCCP network
Therefore, 310150123456789 becomes 14054123456789 under the E.214 numbering plan. The result is an E.214 compliant Global Title,. This number can now be sent to Global Title Analysis.
Example inside World Area 1 (North America)
Translation rule:
match number starting 28401
identify this as belonging to MobilTel-Bulgaria network
do not alter the digits of the number
mark the number as having E.212 numbering plan.
route message on Global Title across SCCP network
Therefore, 284011234567890 becomes 284011234567890 under the E.212 numbering plan. This number has to be converted on the ANSI to ITU boundary. For more details please see Global Title Translation.
The Home Network Identity is the combination of the MCC and the MNC. This is the number which fully identifies a subscriber's home network. This combination is also known as the PLMN.