🇮🇩 Indonesia · Bali · Country Code +62

Cheap Calls to Indonesia & Bali

from ₽8.2 / min

Affordable calls to any number in Indonesia — mobile or landline. Perfect for Russian expats in Bali, tourists, and businesses staying connected across 17,000 islands.

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🌴 Russians in Bali — Stay Connected

Bali has become home to thousands of Russians — digital nomads, freelancers, and those who chose the tropical life. Canggu, Seminyak, Ubud — Russian voices everywhere. But staying in touch with home still matters. With Give a Ring, a call back to Russia costs next to nothing.

🕌 Canggu — digital nomad capital
🌏 Thousands of Russians call Bali home
📱 Call Russia from Bali from ₽1.70/min

Call Rates to Indonesia — 2026

🇷🇺 → 🇮🇩
Russia → Indonesia
Mobile & Landline (incl. Bali)
from ₽8.2
per minute
🇮🇩 → 🇷🇺
Indonesia → Russia
Mobile numbers
₽1.70
per minute
🇮🇩 → 🏙️
Indonesia → Moscow & St. Petersburg
Landline numbers
₽1.00
per minute
📱 → 📱
Give a Ring user
→ Give a Ring user
Free
always

How to Start Calling Indonesia

1

Install the app

Download Give a Ring from Google Play or App Store and register with your mobile number.

2

Top up your balance

Add credit via a bank card directly inside the app.

3

Dial an Indonesian number

Enter the number in international format: +62, then the number without the leading zero.

4

Sign-up Bonus

Get a bonus for calls when you sign up!

How to Dial an Indonesian Number

Indonesia's country code is +62. All Indonesian numbers start with 0 locally — drop that leading zero when dialling internationally. A Bali landline in Denpasar (area code 0361) becomes +62 361, and a mobile number starting with 0812 becomes +62 812.

Indonesian mobile numbers vary by carrier: Telkomsel uses 0811–0813, 0852–0853; Indosat/Ooredoo uses 0814, 0855, 0856, 0857, 0858; XL uses 0817–0819, 0859, 0877–0878. All follow the same +62 rule.

Type the full number into the Give a Ring dial pad starting with +62 and the app takes care of the rest.

Example — Bali / Denpasar (landline)
+62 361 12 34 56
+62 — Indonesia country code 361 — Bali/Denpasar area code (no leading 0) 12 34 56 — subscriber number
Example — Indonesian mobile
+62 812 345 6789
812 — Telkomsel mobile prefix (drop the leading 0)

🇮🇩 Surprising & Funny Facts About Indonesia

🏝️

17,000 Islands — And Counting

Indonesia is made up of over 17,000 islands, of which about 6,000 are permanently inhabited. The country stretches nearly 5,000 km from west to east — roughly the distance from London to Tehran. If you visited one island per day, you'd need 47 years to cover them all. Pack light.

🌋

More Active Volcanoes Than Any Country on Earth

Indonesia hosts 127 active volcanoes — more than anywhere else on the planet. The famous Krakatau eruption of 1883 was so powerful it was heard in Australia, 4,800 km away, and triggered tsunamis that circled the globe three times. Indonesia's volcanoes don't do things by halves.

🦎

Komodo Dragons Are Very Real

On Komodo Island lives the Komodo dragon — the world's largest lizard, up to 3 metres long and 70 kg in weight. Local people called them dragons for centuries and, honestly, the label fits: they're venomous, ambush predators, and can sprint at 20 km/h. Tourists visit on boats, wisely.

🌿

Home of the World's Most Unusual Coffee

Indonesia produces Kopi Luwak — coffee made from beans that have passed through the digestive system of a civet cat. A cup can cost up to $80. The unusual production method supposedly creates a uniquely smooth flavour. Whether or not you believe that, it's certainly the world's most memorable coffee story.

🗣️

700 Languages, One Nation

Indonesia is home to approximately 700 distinct languages and dialects. To avoid turning the country into a linguistic puzzle, the founding fathers in 1945 adopted Bahasa Indonesia as the national language — a language that is native to only a small minority of the population. It was engineered from scratch to unite a nation. It worked.

🌺

Bali — The Only Hindu Island in a Muslim Nation

Indonesia is the world's largest Muslim-majority country, yet Bali practices a unique form of Hinduism, blended with local traditions and animism. The result: thousands of temples, daily flower offerings on every doorstep, and an atmosphere found nowhere else on Earth. That's Bali's magic — and why it attracts millions of visitors a year.

🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Indonesia?

⭐ Top for expats 🌴

Bali — Tropical Paradise & New Home

Canggu is the global capital of digital nomads, packed with co-working spaces, cafes, and Russian-speaking communities. Ubud is the cultural heart with rice terraces and wellness retreats. Seminyak and Kuta offer world-class beaches, surfing, and sunsets worth the 10-hour flight. Bali isn't a resort — it's a lifestyle.

🌊 Bali 🏄

Uluwatu & Bukit — World-Class Surfing

The Bukit Peninsula in southern Bali is a surfing mecca. Uluwatu offers some of the best waves in Southeast Asia, and the clifftop Uluwatu Temple perched 70 metres above the ocean delivers one of the most dramatic sunsets on the island. Resident monkeys will steal your sunglasses without apology.

🏙️

Jakarta — A Megacity on the Move

Indonesia's capital, with a greater metropolitan area of over 30 million people, is one of the world's largest urban agglomerations. Remarkable fact: Indonesia is actively relocating its capital to a brand-new city called Nusantara on Borneo — one of the most ambitious infrastructure projects in modern history. Meanwhile, Jakarta is literally sinking due to groundwater extraction.

🦧

Borneo (Kalimantan) — Jungle & Orangutans

The world's third-largest island is shared between Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brunei. Borneo is home to wild orangutans — our closest relatives after chimpanzees and gorillas — and to rainforests that are over 130 million years old. Dinosaurs once walked these jungles. That context tends to make the visit feel more significant.

🌋

Yogyakarta — Java's Cultural Capital

Near Yogyakarta stands Borobudur — the world's largest Buddhist temple, an extraordinary 9th-century structure with 2,672 relief panels. On a clear morning, the active volcano Merapi smokes on the horizon. Watching the sunrise from the temple is an experience that earns its alarm clock.

🐠

Raja Ampat — The World's Best Diving

This remote archipelago in West Papua contains the most biodiverse marine waters on the planet — 75% of all known coral species and over 1,500 fish species. Divers consistently rank Raja Ampat as the number one dive destination on Earth. The journey is long; the underwater world is unlike anything else.

Frequently Asked Questions

With Give a Ring, calls from Russia to Indonesia — including Bali — start at ₽8.2 per minute in 2026, for both mobile and landline numbers. That's far cheaper than roaming from a Russian mobile operator. The exact rate is displayed in the app before you connect.
Indonesia's country code is +62. All Indonesian local numbers begin with 0 — drop that leading zero when dialling internationally. A Bali landline 0361 12 34 56 becomes +62 361 12 34 56. An Indonesian mobile 0812 345 6789 becomes +62 812 345 6789. On the Give a Ring dial pad, just start with +62 — the app handles the formatting automatically.
Not at all! No passport, no selfie, no verification. All you need is to sign up with your mobile phone number — and you're ready to call Indonesia or Bali right away.
Bali became a magnet for Russian digital nomads and expats especially since 2022. The appeal: year-round warm weather, affordable cost of living, co-working infrastructure, and a large Russian-speaking community. In Canggu, Seminyak, and Ubud you'll find Russian-language cafes, schools, legal services, and entire neighbourhoods. Give a Ring is the simplest way to stay connected — call Russia from Bali or call Bali from Russia at affordable rates.
Yes, absolutely! Give a Ring includes a built-in chat feature that lets you send messages and share photos and videos with your friends and relatives. Best of all, using chat is completely free.

Start Calling Indonesia & Bali Today

From Canggu to Jakarta to your living room in Russia — stay connected with Give a Ring.