Call Rates to Peru — 2026
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How to Start Calling Peru
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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 Peruvian number
Enter the number in international format (+51 then the number) and call.
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How to Dial a Peruvian Number
Peru's country code is +51. Mobile numbers always have 9 digits and start with 9 — just dial +51 followed by all 9 digits, there's no zero to drop. Landline numbers use a local area code (1 for Lima, 84 for Cusco, 54 for Arequipa) plus a 6–7 digit subscriber number — when the area code is written with a leading 0, drop it for international dialling.
Type the full number into the Give a Ring dial pad starting with +51 and the app takes care of the rest. The call rate will be displayed under the dialed number.
🇵🇪 Surprising & Funny Facts About Peru
Birthplace of the Potato — 4,000+ Varieties
The potato was first domesticated in Peru around 8,000 years ago, and the country is now home to over 4,000 native potato varieties — purple, pink, black, knobbly, you name it. There's even a Peruvian potato museum. Somewhere, a French fry is feeling very unoriginal.
Machu Picchu Was "Discovered" by Locals First
When American explorer Hiram Bingham "discovered" Machu Picchu in 1911, local farming families were already living and growing crops on the site. It was never truly lost — just lost to the outside world. Today it draws over a million visitors a year.
Guinea Pig Is a National Dish
In Peru, cuy (guinea pig) isn't a pet — it's a centuries-old delicacy, traditionally roasted whole and served on special occasions. Peruvians eat an estimated 65 million guinea pigs a year. Your childhood pet had a very different career path here.
Giant Drawings You Can Only See From the Sky
The Nazca Lines are enormous geoglyphs — a hummingbird, a monkey, a spider — etched into the desert over 1,500 years ago, each one hundreds of meters across. They're so large they were only properly identified once airplanes started flying overhead in the 20th century.
Ceviche Has Its Own National Holiday
Peru takes ceviche so seriously that it has an official national day — June 28th, Día del Cebiche. Lima is widely considered the gastronomic capital of South America, with more fine-dining restaurants in global top-50 lists than almost anywhere else on the continent.
One of the Deepest Canyons on Earth
Colca Canyon is more than twice as deep as the Grand Canyon in the United States. It's also one of the best places on the planet to watch Andean condors — birds with a wingspan of up to 3 meters — soar at eye level along the cliff edges.
🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Peru?
Machu Picchu — The Lost City of the Incas
A 15th-century Inca citadel perched 2,430 meters above sea level in the Andes, surrounded by cloud forest. One of the New Seven Wonders of the World and Peru's single most iconic sight.
Cusco — The Historic Inca Capital
Once the capital of the Inca Empire, Cusco blends Inca stonework with Spanish colonial architecture. It's also the gateway to the Sacred Valley and the starting point for most Machu Picchu treks.
Lake Titicaca — The Highest Navigable Lake
Sitting at 3,812 meters above sea level on the border with Bolivia, Titicaca is home to the Uros people's extraordinary floating islands, built entirely from reeds.
Lima — South America's Food Capital
Peru's coastal capital is a UNESCO World Heritage colonial center and a world-class culinary destination, famous for ceviche, fusion cuisine, and a thriving café scene overlooking the Pacific.
Nazca Lines — Mysteries Etched in the Desert
Massive ancient geoglyphs covering the Nazca desert plateau, best viewed from a small plane. Their exact purpose is still debated by archaeologists.
The Peruvian Amazon — Iquitos & Tambopata
Peru holds a vast slice of the Amazon rainforest, home to pink river dolphins, jaguars, and thousands of bird species. Iquitos is the largest city in the world unreachable by road.