Call Rates to Latvia — 2026
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Dial a Latvian number
Enter the number in international format (+371 followed by the 8-digit number) and call.
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How to Dial a Latvian Number
Latvia's country code is +371. All Latvian numbers are 8 digits with no leading zero. Mobile numbers begin with 2 (LMT, Tele2, Bite), Riga landlines begin with 67, and other cities use 63–65.
Simply start dialling with +371 on the Give a Ring pad — the app handles the formatting automatically.
🇱🇻 Surprising Facts About Latvia
The Singing Revolution — Independence Through Song
In 1989, roughly two million Latvians, Lithuanians, and Estonians formed a human chain stretching 675 km from Tallinn to Vilnius — through the entire length of Latvia — and sang folk songs together. Known as the Baltic Way, it stands as one of the most beautiful acts of non-violent resistance in history. Latvia sang its way to independence — literally.
More Than Half the Country Is Forest
Forests cover over 54% of Latvia's territory — one of the highest ratios in the European Union. If you call a relative in Latvia and hear birdsong in the background, there's a good chance they're actually standing among trees. Mushroom and berry picking here isn't a hobby — it's a national pastime taken very seriously.
Riga — Art Nouveau Capital of the World
Riga holds the world's largest concentrated collection of Art Nouveau architecture: over 800 buildings in the city centre. UNESCO inscribed Riga's historic centre on its World Heritage list partly for this reason. Berlin, Brussels, and Barcelona look on with quiet envy.
A Hockey Powerhouse Smaller Than Many Cities
With fewer than 2 million people, Latvia consistently ranks among the top 10 ice hockey nations on the planet. At World Championships and the Olympics, Latvian teams have beaten giants including the USA, Canada, and Russia. The secret: in Latvia, hockey is less a sport and more a religion.
The Liqueur That (Allegedly) Saved Catherine the Great
Riga Black Balsam, a bitter herbal liqueur, has been produced using the same recipe for over 240 years. Legend claims it cured Catherine the Great of a serious illness during her visit to Riga. Today it's added to coffee, tea, cocktails, and consumed neat at sunset. Whatever ails you, there's a Latvian grandmother somewhere insisting it will help.
Amber Washes Up on the Beach After Every Storm
Latvia's Baltic coastline is one of the world's prime sources of Baltic amber. After a good storm, locals walk the beach with nets and simply collect pieces from the sand. This fossilised resin, 40–50 million years old, is called the "gold of the Baltic" — and sold on virtually every corner of Riga's Old Town.
🗺️ Best Places to Visit in Latvia
Riga — Old Town & Art Nouveau
The UNESCO-listed medieval Old Town features the Dome Cathedral, Dome Square, and the Three Brothers (the oldest surviving residential buildings in Riga). Nearby, Alberta and Elizabetes streets showcase Europe's finest Art Nouveau facades. Don't miss the Riga Central Market — housed in five former zeppelin hangars.
Jūrmala — The Baltic Riviera
Thirty kilometres of white sandy beach just thirty minutes from Riga by train. Romantic wooden villas, pine-scented air, and the lively pedestrian street Jomas iela. In summer Jūrmala is the most popular resort on the Baltic coast — and you'll quickly understand why.
Gauja National Park — Castles in the Forest
The Gauja river valley offers sandstone caves, ancient pine forests, and medieval castles: Sigulda, Turaida, and Cēsis. Soviet filmmakers shot many of their "foreign-country" scenes here. Today it has ski slopes, cable cars, cycling trails, and the most exciting bobsled track in the region.
Rundāle Palace — Latvia's Versailles
A baroque masterpiece designed by Bartolomeo Rastrelli — the same architect behind the Winter Palace in St Petersburg. Gilded state rooms, a celebrated rose garden with 2,200 varieties, and surprisingly uncrowded for something this beautiful. A hidden gem most tourists somehow overlook.
Liepāja — The City Where the Wind is Born
That is Liepāja's actual official motto. This windswept port city on the western coast is the birthplace of Latvian rock music and home to Karosta fortress — where you can spend the night in a former military prison cell (voluntarily, and with breakfast). Its beach is among the best in the Baltic states.
Daugavpils — Fortress and Mark Rothko
Latvia's second city carries an unexpectedly rich cultural heritage. Inside its restored 19th-century fortress lives an entire arts quarter, including the Mark Rothko Art Centre — the abstract expressionist giant was born here. Multicultural, underrated by tourists, and all the more interesting for it.