Call Rates to Kazakhstan — 2026
Mobile & Landline
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Landline numbers
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How to Start Calling Kazakhstan
Install the app
Download Give a ring from Google Play and register with your Russian mobile number.
Top up your balance
Add credit via SBP (Faster Payment System) or bank card directly inside the app.
Dial a Kazakhstan number
Enter the number in international format (+7 city code number) and call.
10 free minutes
New users receive 10 free minutes for international calls as a welcome gift.
How to Dial a Kazakhstan Number
Kazakhstan uses country code +7 — the same as Russia. It's a quirk of history: Kazakhstan is the only country in the world that shares the +7 code with Russia, inheriting it from the Soviet telephone network.
After +7 comes a 3-digit city code and a 7-digit subscriber number. Just type it into the Give a ring dial pad starting with +7.
🇰🇿 Surprising Facts About Kazakhstan
The Birthplace of Every Apple on Earth
Geneticists have proven that every cultivated apple in the world descends from a wild tree growing in Kazakhstan's Tian Shan mountains. Almaty literally means "Father of Apples." So every time you bite into an apple, you owe Kazakhstan a nod.
Gagarin Launched from Here
The Baikonur Cosmodrome — the world's oldest and largest space launch facility — sits on the Kazakh steppe. Yuri Gagarin became the first human in space in 1961 from this very spot. Russian cosmonauts still launch from here today.
Bigger Than All of Western Europe
Kazakhstan is the 9th largest country on Earth and the world's biggest landlocked nation. Its territory exceeds that of all of Western Europe combined — yet its population density is among the lowest on the planet.
The World's Uranium Champion
Kazakhstan mines roughly 40% of the world's uranium — more than any other country. Remarkably, in 1991 it voluntarily gave up the nuclear weapons it inherited from the USSR, becoming one of the first nations to disarm by choice.
Borat Was Not Filmed Here
Sacha Baron Cohen's famous comedy was shot in Romania and the United States, not Kazakhstan. The film was initially banned there — yet authorities later acknowledged that it triggered a sharp spike in tourist interest in the actual country.
A Capital That Changed Its Name Three Times
Astana is a futuristic capital built from scratch on the open steppe. In a few decades it went from Akmola to Astana to Nur-Sultan and back to Astana again — each rename costing millions in reprinted documents and replaced signage.