Call Rates to Poland — 2026
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Mobile numbers
Landline numbers
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How to Start Calling Poland
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Download Give a ring from Google Play or the Apple Store and sign up with your mobile number.
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Dial a Polish Number
Enter the number in international format (+48, then the 9-digit number) and call.
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How to Dial a Number in Poland
Poland's country code is +48. Polish numbers have 9 digits and are dialled with no leading zero — unlike France, there's no zero to drop, since one never existed. Landline numbers start with a two-digit area code (Warsaw — 22, Krakow — 12, Gdansk — 58), while mobile numbers start with 5, 6, 7, or 8.
Dial directly on the Give a ring keypad — start with +48. The rate will be shown beneath the number as you type.
🇵🇱 Amazing Facts About Poland
A Cathedral Made of Salt, Underground
The Wieliczka Salt Mine near Krakow operated continuously from the 13th century until 1996. More than 100 metres underground, miners carved entire chapels out of rock salt — including the Chapel of St. Kinga, where even the chandeliers are made of salt crystal. UNESCO added it to the very first World Heritage List back in 1978.
A Melody That Never Finishes
Every hour, a trumpeter in the tower of St. Mary's Basilica in Krakow plays the hejnał — a short tune that cuts off mid-note. Legend says a 13th-century trumpeter was shot through the throat by a Mongol arrow while sounding the alarm, and the melody has been deliberately broken at the same spot ever since — for nearly 800 years running.
Two Nobel Prizes, One Woman
Maria Skłodowska-Curie was born in Warsaw and became the first person in history to win a Nobel Prize in two different sciences — Physics (1903) and Chemistry (1911). She named the element polonium after her native Poland, which didn't even exist on the map of Europe at the time.
🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Poland?
Warsaw — Risen From the Ashes
Warsaw's Old Town was 85% destroyed during World War II and rebuilt using 18th-century paintings by the Venetian artist Canaletto as a blueprint. It's now a UNESCO World Heritage Site — one of the rare cases where a meticulous reconstruction, not an original, earned the honour.
Krakow & Wawel Castle
Poland's former royal capital, home to the largest medieval market square in Europe (Rynek Główny, 200×200 m). The royal castle sits atop Wawel Hill, beneath which, legend says, lived the Wawel Dragon — defeated by the wit of a simple shoemaker.
Gdansk & the Baltic Coast
A Hanseatic port city with colourful Flemish Renaissance facades, the birthplace of the Solidarity movement, and Baltic Sea beaches nearby. Gdansk is one of the world's largest centres for amber trading and craft, prized locally as "Baltic gold."
Wroclaw — The City of Dwarves
More than 600 tiny bronze dwarf statues are scattered across Wroclaw's streets, originally a symbol of the "Orange Alternative" resistance movement against communist rule. Today, hunting for dwarves has become a favourite pastime for visitors of all ages.
Zakopane & the Tatra Mountains
Poland's winter capital at the foot of the Tatra range, known for wooden regional architecture, thermal springs, and trails leading to Rysy, Poland's highest peak (2,499 m). A hiker's paradise in summer, a skier's paradise in winter.
Malbork — the World's Largest Castle
This Gothic Teutonic Order fortress on the Nogat River is considered the largest brick castle, and the largest castle by land area, in the world — covering roughly 21 hectares. Built in the 13th century, it's still staggering in scale even by modern standards.