🇲🇽 Mexico · Country Code +52

Cheap Calls to Mexico

from ₽0.2 / min

Affordable calls to any number in Mexico — mobile or landline. Stay connected with family and friends in Mexico City, Cancún, Guadalajara, and beyond at great rates from anywhere in the world.

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Call Rates to Mexico — 2026

🇷🇺 → 🇲🇽
Russia → Mexico
Mobile & Landline
from ₽0.2
per minute
🇲🇽 → 🇷🇺
Mexico → Russia
Mobile numbers
₽1.70
per minute
🇲🇽 → 🏙️
Mexico → Moscow & St. Petersburg
Landline numbers
₽1.00
per minute
📱 → 📱
Give a Ring user
→ Give a Ring user
Free
always

How to Start Calling Mexico

1

Install the app

Download Give a Ring from Google Play or the Apple 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 a Mexican number

Enter the number in international format (+52 then the 10-digit number) and call.

4

Welcome Bonus

Get a bonus for calls when you sign up — start talking right away!

How to Dial a Mexican Number

Mexico's country code is +52. Since 2020, all Mexican numbers — both mobile and landline — are 10 digits and dialled the same way. The old "mobile 1" (a digit 1 inserted after +52 for cell phones) is no longer required.

Simply type +52 followed by the full 10-digit number into the Give a Ring dial pad. The call rate will be displayed under the dialled number before you connect.

Example — Mexico City (landline)
+52 55 1234 5678
+52 — Mexico country code 55 — Mexico City area code 1234 5678 — subscriber number
Example — Cancún
+52 998 123 4567
998 — Cancún area code

🇲🇽 Surprising & Funny Facts About Mexico

🍫

Mexico Invented Chocolate (You're Welcome)

The Aztecs and Maya were drinking xocolātl — a bitter cacao beverage — centuries before the Spanish brought cocoa to Europe. Every chocolate bar, hot chocolate, and chocolate cake that has ever made your day better traces its origins directly to Mexico. You owe this country a thank-you call. At ₽0.2 a minute, you have no excuse not to make it.

🌆

Mexico City Is Literally Sinking

The capital was built on the bed of drained Lake Texcoco — and sinks up to 50 cm per year in some districts. Over the past century, the city centre has dropped nearly 10 metres. No other major metropolis on Earth is disappearing into the ground this fast. The Aztec engineers who built the original island city would have had notes.

💀

Día de los Muertos Is Not Mexican Halloween

Day of the Dead (Nov 1–2) is a joyful reunion with departed loved ones, not a spooky holiday. Families build colourful ofrendas (altars) with food, marigolds, and photos to welcome back their relatives' souls for a single day. UNESCO placed it on the Intangible Cultural Heritage list in 2008. Halloween by comparison is just adults in costumes asking for candy.

🌶️

Mexico Fed the Entire World (And Made It Spicy)

Chilli peppers, tomatoes, avocado, corn, vanilla, and cacao all originated in Mexico. Before contact, European cuisine had no tomato sauce, no guacamole, no popcorn, and no chocolate. Mexican cuisine is a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage. Italy still hasn't fully acknowledged what it owes Mexico for the tomato in pizza Margherita.

🦎

A Quarter of the World's Reptiles Live Here

Mexico is home to over 800 reptile species — roughly one quarter of all known reptile species on Earth. Crocodiles, iguanas, rattlesnakes, and the giant leatherback sea turtle all call Mexico home. If you like reptiles it's paradise; if you don't, it remains paradise — just watch where you step in the jungle.

🏛️

35 UNESCO World Heritage Sites

Mexico ranks among the top 10 countries in the world for UNESCO World Heritage Sites with 35 entries — including the pyramids of Teotihuacan, the historic centre of Mexico City, the ancient Maya city of Chichén Itzá, biosphere reserves, and the agave landscape of Jalisco (birthplace of tequila). For comparison, Russia has 32. Mexico wins on quantity and on tequila.

🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Mexico?

🏛️

Mexico City — A Metropolis on a Dry Lakebed

One of the world's largest capitals with a UNESCO-listed historic centre. The pyramids of Teotihuacan are just 50 km away. Don't miss the National Museum of Anthropology — arguably the best pre-Columbian museum on Earth — and the floating gardens of Xochimilco, a living remnant of the Aztec chinampa islands.

🏖️

Cancún & the Riviera Maya

White sand beaches and turquoise Caribbean waters that look like a screensaver — except real. Nearby are cenotes (crystal-clear underground sinkholes), the clifftop Maya ruins of Tulum, and the Sian Ka'an UNESCO Biosphere Reserve. Cancún is where history and beach holiday exist in the same postcode.

🐍

Chichén Itzá — A New Wonder of the World

The pyramid El Castillo at Chichén Itzá is one of the New Seven Wonders of the World. During the spring and autumn equinoxes, the angle of sunlight creates the illusion of a serpent slithering down the pyramid's staircase. The Maya built this with no metal tools, no wheels, and no mortar. Humbling doesn't begin to cover it.

🌵

Oaxaca — Food, Culture & Mezcal

A colonial highland city surrounded by indigenous villages, ancient Zapotec pyramids at Monte Albán, and the world's best mole sauces. Oaxaca also hosts Mexico's most celebrated Día de los Muertos festival. The mezcal is made locally, artisanally, and available absolutely everywhere. Drink responsibly. Call home afterward.

🐋

Baja California — Whales & Desert

Every winter, thousands of grey whales migrate to the Pacific lagoons of Baja California to give birth. Tourists can watch — and in some lagoons, actually touch — grey whales from small boats. It is one of the most extraordinary wildlife encounters on Earth and something no documentary fully prepares you for.

🎨

San Miguel de Allende — The Most Beautiful Town

A perfectly preserved colonial town repeatedly voted the world's best city by Travel + Leisure readers. The rose-coloured neo-Gothic church La Parroquia dominates cobblestone streets filled with galleries, jazz bars, and expat artists. San Miguel is the kind of place people visit for a week and stay for a decade.

Frequently Asked Questions

With Give a Ring, calls from Russia to Mexico start at ₽0.2 per minute in 2026 — significantly cheaper than roaming charges from Russian mobile operators. The exact rate is displayed in the app before you dial.
Mexico's country code is +52. Since 2020, all Mexican numbers are 10 digits — mobile and landline alike — and dialled the same way. Simply dial +52 followed by the 10-digit number. A Mexico City number 55 1234 5678 becomes +52 55 1234 5678. The old "mobile 1" prefix (a digit 1 after +52 for cell phones) is no longer used. On the Give a Ring dial pad, start with +52 and type the rest.
Not at all! You don't need to upload any ID or documents. All you need is to sign up with your mobile phone number — and you're ready to call Mexico right away.
The most commonly dialled Mexican city codes: Mexico City — 55, Guadalajara — 33, Monterrey — 81, Cancún — 998, Tijuana — 664, Puebla — 222, Acapulco — 744. Dial +52 followed by the 10-digit number including the city code — Give a Ring handles the formatting automatically.
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 Mexico Today

From ₽0.2/min — no SIM card, no roaming, no paperwork