Call Rates to Belarus — 2026
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How to Dial a Belarus Number
Belarus's country code is +375. Minsk landlines use area code 17, Gomel 232, Brest 162, Grodno 152, Vitebsk 212, Mogilev 222. Mobile operators: MTS — prefix 29, A1 (formerly Velcom) — 44, life:) — 25, BeST/MTS — 33.
Type the full number into the Give a Ring dial pad starting with +375 and the app takes care of the rest.
🇧🇾 Surprising & Funny Facts About Belarus
The Potato Republic
Belarus holds the unofficial world title for potato consumption: Belarusians eat an average of around 180 kg of potatoes per person per year — more than any other nation. Locals have over 300 distinct potato recipes, crowned by the iconic crispy draniki (potato pancakes). Calling a Belarusian a "bulbash" (potato person) is practically a compliment.
The Last Wild Bison in Europe
Belovezhskaya Pushcha is the only place on Earth where you can still see truly wild European bison (Bison bonasus). The species was completely extinct in the wild by the early 20th century but was painstakingly rebuilt from just 12 zoo survivors. Today, hundreds roam the primeval forest — one of conservation's greatest success stories.
Two UNESCO Castles, One Small Country
With a population under 10 million, Belarus punches well above its weight with two UNESCO World Heritage Sites: the Mir Castle (15th–16th century, gothic severity) and the Nesvizh Castle (baroque splendour of the Radziwill dynasty). They sit barely 30 minutes apart — a two-castle day trip done in comfort.
Surprisingly Enormous Tech Footprint
Tiny Belarus has quietly built a remarkable tech legacy: World of Tanks was made here, so was the file manager Total Commander, and the founding team behind Viber has Belarusian roots. The Minsk High-Tech Park is one of Eastern Europe's largest IT clusters. Apparently forests and bison are excellent conditions for writing code.
Europe's Green Lung
Belarus is blanketed in forest — roughly 40% of its territory — with another 12% covered by peat bogs. The country has over 11,000 lakes and 20,000 rivers. Locals call it "Sineokaya" (Blue-Eyed) for all the glittering water. On a map, Belarus genuinely looks like someone dropped a sponge on Eastern Europe.
The Fortress That Held for Weeks
The Brest Fortress was the very first point of Soviet territory to be attacked on 22 June 1941. Its defenders — outnumbered and cut off — held out for weeks against an assault the German command expected to take hours. The inscription carved into a wall by a dying soldier sums it up: "I am dying but I do not surrender." Few places carry that weight.
🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Belarus?
Minsk — The Phoenix City
Minsk was 80% destroyed in World War II and rebuilt in sweeping Stalinist imperial style — grand boulevards, monumental archways, and heroic statuary unlike anywhere else. Yet Minsk is also surprisingly lively, with a thriving arts scene, excellent food, and the charming old Troitskoye Predmestye district alongside the river.
Nesvizh Castle — Baroque Jewel
The ancestral seat of the powerful Radziwill dynasty and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The castle is surrounded by a series of scenic ponds and landscaped parks; its interiors have been exquisitely restored. According to local legend, the ghost of Barbara Radziwill — the "Black Lady" — still wanders the halls. Whether you believe it or not, the castle is worth the visit.
Belovezhskaya Pushcha
One of the last primeval lowland forests in Europe and a UNESCO World Heritage Site shared with Poland. Home to European bison, wolves, lynx, and rare bird species. In winter, the forest houses the official residence of Belarus's Father Frost (Ded Moroz) — a genuinely magical experience for families.
Brest Fortress Memorial
The Brest Hero-Fortress memorial complex is one of the most moving sites in the former Soviet Union. Haunting ruins, monumental sculpture, an eternal flame, and a daily broadcast of Levitan's announcement of the German invasion create an atmosphere that is impossible to forget. History does not get more tangible than this.
Grodno — Belarus's Most European City
Grodno escaped major wartime destruction and retains a genuinely old European feel: two medieval castles on the bluffs above the Neman River, baroque Catholic churches, and narrow streets lined with centuries-old buildings. It is by far the best-preserved historic city in Belarus — and one of its most beautiful.
The Augustow Canal
A 101-km engineering masterpiece from the 19th century linking the Neman and Vistula rivers across the Belarus–Poland border. Scenic 19th-century locks, pine forests, and crystal-clear water have turned the canal into the premier tourist route in Belarusian Poozerie. Perfect for kayaking, cycling, or simply slowing down.