You do not have to dial a one after star 67 for out of state calls. You do need to enter the area code.
depending on the phone you have to dial Star (*) 69 or star (*) 67
press star 67
Dial *67 before the number. Note: this does not work on calls outside of the U.S. Dial 141 before the number for the U.K
Yes, if you dial *67 (or equivalently 1167) to block your outgoing Caller ID, and then dial *69 (or equivalently 1169) to call back the last incoming number, it should show up on the other person's phone as "blocked" or "number withheld." In order for *67 to work, it should be dialed first, before any other "star codes." For example, to block outgoing Caller ID and also cancel call waiting, you should dial *67 *70, not *70 *67. The order shouldn't matter, but it sometimes does. In the US and Canada, you can dial 11xx instead of *xx, if you are using a rotary or pulse-dial phone.
*67 is the code in North America (USA, Canada, etc.) to block your caller ID from being sent, on a per-call basis. (If you are on a rotary or pulse-dial phone, you can use 1167 instead of *67.) This code should always be the very first thing dialed, before any other codes or prefixes. For example, if you want to block caller ID and also cancel call waiting, you should dial *67 first, then *70. So, to dial a long distance call with caller ID blocked, dial:*67 (or 1167) first,then other "star codes" such as *70,then the long distance company code (if applicable): 101xxxx,then the long distance prefix 1,then the area code and number.
When you need to dial a number that includes 67 but have to dial 9 first to get an outside line, you would enter it as 9-67. This means you first dial 9 to access the outside line, followed by 67 as the next part of the number you wish to reach. For example, if you are trying to call 67-1234, you would dial 9-67-1234.
When you want your number to come up as private when you call them, you dial *67 before the actual number.
Normally you dial * then 6 then 7. If you are using a rotary phone, you can dial 1167 instead of *67.
no it will reject any incoming number that has been blocked from your caller id they will have to dial *67 to unblock their number so you can see who is calling
If you're in the United States, dial *67 before you type in the number (example: *67123-456-7890)
Dial *67 before the number you wish to dial.
I'm not sure what you mean, can you use it more than once. But *67 blocks your phone number when you dial out. If you need to call multiple people, you will need to use *67 each time to restrict your number when you dial out. So, I guess you can interpret that to mean yes, you can use it more than once.