Call Rates to Czechia — 2026
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How to Start Calling Czechia
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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 Czech number
Enter the number in international format (+420 followed by the 9-digit number) and call.
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How to Dial a Czech Number
Czechia's country code is +420. All Czech numbers are exactly 9 digits long (excluding the country code) — and unlike many countries, they have no leading zero. This makes it simpler: just add +420 before the full 9-digit number and you're done.
Prague landline numbers start with 2, mobile numbers start with 6 or 7. Type the full number into the Give a Ring dial pad starting with +420 and the app takes care of the rest. The call rate will be displayed under the dialled number.
🇨🇿 Surprising & Funny Facts About Czechia
The World's Biggest Beer Drinkers
Czechia holds the world record for per-capita beer consumption — around 180 litres per adult per year. That's roughly a pint a day, every day, weekends and holidays included. The country also invented the pilsner style in Plzeň in 1842, which is now the most popular beer style on Earth. Czechs created the beer the rest of the world drinks.
The Country That Gave Us the Word "Robot"
The word "robot" is Czech. Writer Karel Čapek coined it in his 1920 play R.U.R., from the Czech word robota meaning forced labour or drudgery. The word is now used in dozens of languages without translation. No other language has contributed a single word so central to the entire field of science and technology.
The World's Largest Castle Complex
Prague Castle covers around 70,000 m² and is certified by Guinness World Records as the largest ancient castle complex on Earth. Construction began in the 9th century and continued for over 900 years. Inside are cathedrals, palaces, galleries, monasteries, and even a working vineyard. It's not just a castle — it's an entire city inside a city.
The Orloj: Medieval Clock with a Dark Legend
The Prague Astronomical Clock (Orloj), installed in 1410, is one of the oldest working mechanical clocks in the world. Every hour, figurines of the 12 Apostles emerge from its windows. According to legend, after the clock was finished, the master clockmaker Hanuš was blinded so he couldn't replicate it elsewhere. His revenge: he reportedly disabled the clock, which stopped for decades.
Literary Giants from a Small Country
Czechia is the birthplace of Franz Kafka, Jaroslav Hašek (author of The Good Soldier Švejk) and Milan Kundera. Kafka wrote in German about bureaucratic absurdity while living in Prague — and, by all accounts, was not exaggerating. Hašek's Švejk, the bumbling soldier who confuses his enemies into defeat, is considered one of the greatest antiwar novels ever written.
Soft Contact Lenses — a Czech Kitchen Invention
Soft contact lenses are a Czech invention. In 1961, Professor Otto Wichterle developed the world's first hydrogel contact lenses at home using a children's construction kit. Today hundreds of millions of people around the world wear contact lenses — and almost none of them know they owe it to a Czech kitchen and a toy set.
🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Czechia?
Prague — the Golden City
Prague Castle, Charles Bridge lined with Baroque statues, the Old Town Square with the Astronomical Clock, the Gothic St. Vitus Cathedral, and the bohemian Žižkov district. Prague is one of the few European capitals that survived World War II virtually undamaged, leaving its entire medieval architecture intact.
Český Krumlov — Fairy-Tale Medieval Town
A small town on the Vltava River with a beautifully preserved 13th-century castle, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Often called "little Prague," many visitors find it even more enchanting. It is especially magical in the winter months, when the tourist crowds thin out and the snow settles on the castle towers.
Karlovy Vary — Spa Town with History
A famous spa resort where you can drink mineral water straight from 13 natural springs. According to legend, it was founded by Emperor Charles IV in the 14th century after he discovered the springs on a royal hunt. Today it also hosts one of the world's major film festivals. The city is particularly popular with Russian visitors — signs are often in Russian alongside Czech.
Kutná Hora — Silver Town & Bone Church
In the Middle Ages, Kutná Hora's silver mines funded the entire Bohemian economy. The main sight is the Cathedral of St. Barbara, one of the finest examples of Gothic architecture in Central Europe. In the nearby village of Sedlec, the famous Bone Church (Ossuary) is decorated with the bones of approximately 40,000 people. It sounds grim — but it looks like a work of art.
Bohemian Switzerland — Sandstone Landscapes
A national park in northern Czechia famous for dramatic sandstone rock formations, gorges, and natural arches. The Pravčická brána is the largest natural rock arch in Central Europe. The scenery is so striking that several international films have been shot here.
Moravia — Wine, Castles & Folk Tradition
The eastern part of Czechia is less visited but equally rewarding: rolling vineyards along river valleys, authentic villages with living folk traditions, the UNESCO-listed Lednice Castle with its vast English landscape park, and the lively student city of Brno — the country's second-largest city, with a great food scene and architecture spanning Gothic to Bauhaus.