Call Rates to Canada — 2026
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How to Start Calling Canada
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Download Give a Ring from Google Play or Apple Store and register with your mobile number.
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Add credit via a bank card directly inside the app.
Dial a Canadian number
Enter +1 followed by the 3-digit area code and the 7-digit local number, then call.
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How to Dial a Canadian Number
Canada's country code is +1 — the same as the United States. Both countries share the North American Numbering Plan (NANP). Every Canadian number is 10 digits long: a 3-digit area code followed by a 7-digit local number. There is no leading zero to drop — unlike European numbers.
Type the full number on the Give a Ring dial pad starting with +1 and the app takes care of the rest.
🗺️ Major Canadian City Area Codes
- 416 / 647 / 437 — Toronto
- 604 / 778 / 236 — Vancouver
- 514 / 438 — Montreal
- 403 / 587 / 825 — Calgary
- 780 / 587 — Edmonton
- 613 / 343 — Ottawa
- 902 — Halifax
- 204 / 431 — Winnipeg
🇨🇦 Surprising & Funny Facts About Canada
The Second-Largest Country on Earth — Almost Empty
Canada covers 9.98 million km² — just slightly smaller than all of Europe — yet has fewer than 40 million people. The population density is under 4 people per km², roughly the same as Siberia. The vast majority of Canadians live within 150 km of the US border, crammed into a thin ribbon at the bottom of a continent they technically own the rest of.
The Strategic Maple Syrup Reserve Is Real
Canada produces 70–80% of the world's maple syrup, and Quebec's Federation of Maple Syrup Producers maintains a literal strategic reserve of several million kilograms — stored in warehouses — to stabilise global supply during bad harvest years. In 2012 thieves stole $18 million worth of syrup from it. Canada was not amused.
Hockey Is a Religion (With Statistics)
Only 7 of the NHL's 32 teams are Canadian — yet Canada registers more than 600,000 amateur hockey players and treats the Stanley Cup Final as its most-watched annual television event. Wayne Gretzky alone holds or shares 61 NHL records. When Canada plays at the Olympics, the country more or less stops working for the duration of the game.
Winnie-the-Pooh Is Canadian
The world's most famous teddy bear was inspired by a real bear — a Canadian black bear named Winnipeg, brought from Manitoba to London by a Canadian soldier in WWI as a regimental mascot. A. A. Milne's son Christopher Robin adored her at the London Zoo and named his stuffed bear after her. Canada's contribution to children's literature is therefore enormous and largely unacknowledged.
World Leader in Dark Sky Preserves
Canada has more certified dark sky preserves than any other country — protected areas where light pollution is legally restricted. The Yukon and Northwest Territories offer Northern Lights viewing hundreds of nights per year. Meanwhile, in cities like Toronto, residents have forgotten what more than a dozen stars look like. Geography contains multitudes.
Officially Bilingual, Actually Wildly Multilingual
Canada is officially bilingual in English and French, but in reality over 200 languages are spoken. Quebec is 78% francophone; Vancouver's Richmond district is so Mandarin- and Cantonese-speaking that some businesses operate almost entirely in Chinese. The Russian-speaking diaspora in Canada numbers over 600,000 people — and growing.
🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Canada?
Banff & Lake Louise, Alberta
Canada's most iconic landscape: glacier-fed Lake Louise glows turquoise in a ring of Rocky Mountain peaks. Banff National Park (established 1885) offers world-class skiing in winter and dramatic hiking in summer. The Icefields Parkway drive between Banff and Jasper is widely considered one of the most beautiful roads on Earth.
Niagara Falls, Ontario
More than 2,800 m³ of water thunders over the Horseshoe Falls every second — making it one of the most powerful waterfalls on the planet. The Canadian side offers the best views by far. Unlike what many expect, Niagara does not freeze solid even in −30°C winters — the sheer force of water keeps it flowing year-round.
Old Montreal (Vieux-Montréal)
Cobblestone streets, centuries-old churches, French café culture and some of the best food in North America. The Notre-Dame Basilica — with its breathtaking blue-and-gold interior lit by thousands of stars — is arguably the most beautiful church on the continent. Montreal's bagels, smoked meat, and poutine are in a culinary category of their own.
Vancouver Island, British Columbia
A 450 km island with a mild Pacific climate, ancient rainforests, and orca-filled straits. Victoria, its capital, is more English than England — afternoon tea, double-decker buses, and immaculate gardens at Butchart. The island's west coast (Tofino) is where surfers ride waves in front of old-growth forest. Bald eagles are literally everywhere.
Yukon — Land of the Northern Lights
Canada's northwestern territory is one of the best places on Earth to see the Aurora Borealis. The lights are visible on clear nights from late August through April. Winter temperatures drop to −40°C, but the skies over the tundra reward the brave with curtains of green and purple light that no photograph has ever quite captured.
Ottawa — The Capital With a Frozen Trick
Ottawa's Rideau Canal — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — freezes every winter into the world's largest naturally frozen skating rink at 7.8 km long. Ottawans commute to work on skates and eat BeaverTails pastries by the canal. Parliament Hill's Gothic Revival buildings are free to visit, and the city's museums are among the best in North America — and largely free of charge.