Call Rates to Algeria — 2026
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How to Start Calling Algeria
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Dial an Algerian number
Enter the number in international format (+213 then the number without leading zero) and call.
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How to Dial an Algerian Number
Algeria's country code is +213. All Algerian numbers start with a leading 0 in domestic format. When dialling internationally, drop that leading zero. An Algiers landline starting with 021 becomes +213 21, and a mobile number starting with 05, 06, or 07 becomes +213 5, +213 6, or +213 7.
Type the full number into the Give a Ring dial pad starting with +213 and the app takes care of the rest. The call rate will be displayed under the dialed number.
🇩🇿 Surprising & Funny Facts About Algeria
The World's Smallest Fox Calls It Home
Algeria's national animal is the fennec fox, the smallest fox species on Earth, weighing barely more than a kitten. Its enormous ears — up to 15 cm long — work like built-in air conditioners, radiating away heat so it can survive the Sahara's brutal sun.
Algeria Sent Camels to the Wild West
In the 1850s, the US Army shipped camels — many sourced from Algeria — across the Atlantic aboard the USS Supply to form the US Army Camel Corps, betting they would conquer the deserts of Texas and Arizona. The experiment fizzled after the Civil War, but feral descendants reportedly roamed the American Southwest for decades.
It Once Snowed in the Sahara
In February 2018, the desert town of Aïn Sefra — nicknamed the "Gateway to the Sahara" — was blanketed in roughly 40 cm of snow. In a country where Saharan temperatures regularly hit 50°C, locals woke up to a landscape of golden dunes capped in white.
Bigger Than Four European Countries Combined
At 2.38 million km², Algeria is the largest country in Africa and the 10th largest in the world — bigger than France, Spain, Sweden, and Germany put together. Lay it over a map of the United States and it would stretch across the entire middle third of the country.
Almost Everyone Lives on the Edge
Despite its enormous size, roughly 90% of Algerians live on just 12% of the land — a narrow strip along the Mediterranean coast. The Sahara takes up over 80% of the country and is home to barely a tenth of the population.
Two Nobel Prizes From One Nation
Algeria has produced two Nobel laureates: writer Albert Camus, born in Mondovi, won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1957, and physicist Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, born in Constantine, won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1997.
🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Algeria?
Algiers — The White City
The Casbah, a UNESCO-listed labyrinth of whitewashed houses and narrow alleys, tumbles down toward the Mediterranean. Wide French colonial-era boulevards and seafront promenades give the capital its nickname, "Alger la Blanche."
Constantine — The City of Bridges
Perched on a rocky plateau split by the deep Rhumel Gorge, Constantine is linked by a network of dramatic suspension bridges. The Sidi M'Cid Bridge hangs 175 meters above the gorge and was the highest bridge in the world until 1929.
Timgad — The Pompeii of Africa
Founded by Emperor Trajan around 100 AD, this UNESCO World Heritage site is one of the best-preserved Roman cities anywhere, with intact streets, an arch, a forum, and a theatre still standing in the Aurès Mountains.
Djémila — Roman Ruins in the Mountains
Whose name means "beautiful" in Arabic, Djémila is a UNESCO-listed Berbero-Roman city with remarkably well-preserved temples, mosaics, a forum, and one of the finest ancient baptisteries in North Africa.
Tassili n'Ajjer — Prehistoric Art in the Sahara
This vast Saharan plateau hides more than 15,000 prehistoric rock engravings and paintings dating back over 10,000 years, set among sandstone arches, canyons, and towering eroded rock pillars.
Ghardaïa & the M'Zab Valley
A UNESCO-listed cluster of five fortified desert towns built by the Mozabite people, famous for their distinctive earthen architecture, ancient irrigation systems, and centuries-old way of life largely unchanged by time.