Call Rates to Romania — 2026
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Landline numbers
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How to Start Calling Romania
Install the app
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 Romanian number
Enter the number in international format (+40 then the number without leading zero) and call.
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How to Dial a Romanian Number
Romania's country code is +40. Local landline numbers start with 0 plus the area code (Bucharest is 021), and mobile numbers start with 07. When dialling internationally, drop that leading zero. A Bucharest landline starting with 021 becomes +40 21, a mobile number starting with 07 becomes +40 7.
Type the full number into the Give a Ring dial pad starting with +40 and the app takes care of the rest. The call rate will be displayed under the dialed number.
🇷🇴 Surprising & Funny Facts About Romania
Dracula's Castle Was Never Dracula's
Bran Castle is marketed worldwide as "Dracula's Castle", yet Vlad the Impaler — the real-life inspiration for Bram Stoker's novel — almost certainly never set foot inside it. He may have passed nearby once. The castle still gets over a million visitors a year hunting for a vampire who was probably never there.
The Second-Heaviest Building on Earth
Bucharest's Palace of Parliament is the heaviest administrative building in the world and the second-largest after the Pentagon. It has 1,100 rooms, used a third of Romania's national wealth to build in the 1980s, and is still slowly sinking into the ground by a few millimetres a year.
A Cemetery Where Tombstones Make You Laugh
In the village of Săpânța sits the Merry Cemetery, where every grave has a brightly painted cross with a cartoon and a funny, often brutally honest poem about how the person lived (and sometimes died). It's one of the very few cemeteries on Earth people visit to smile.
Europe's Largest Brown Bear Population
Romania's Carpathian forests are home to roughly 6,000 wild brown bears — the largest population in Europe outside of Russia. Some towns near the mountains have bears wandering through the streets at night looking through bins, which locals treat with surprising calm.
"The Best Road in the World"
The British TV show Top Gear once called the Transfăgărășan mountain highway "the best road in the world." It snakes through the Carpathians at over 2,000 m altitude, was built under Ceaușescu partly as a military route, and is closed by snow for more than half the year.
A Red-and-White String for Spring
Every March 1st, Romanians give each other a small charm called a mărțișor — a red-and-white twisted thread tied to a trinket — to celebrate the coming of spring. It's such a beloved tradition that street vendors sell them on nearly every corner for the whole last week of February.
🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Romania?
Bucharest — "Little Paris"
Romania's capital earned its old nickname for its grand Belle Époque boulevards and Arcul de Triumf. Today it mixes Communist-era monuments like the colossal Palace of Parliament with a lively Old Town full of cafés, bars, and live music.
Transylvania — Castles & Medieval Towns
Home to Bran Castle, the fortified Saxon town of Sighișoara (birthplace of Vlad the Impaler), and Brașov with its Gothic Black Church. Cobblestone streets, hilltop fortresses, and a permanent atmosphere of gothic fairy tale.
The Carpathian Mountains & Transfăgărășan
Wild forests, brown bears, and one of the most spectacular mountain roads on the planet. The Transfăgărășan and Transalpina highways wind through hairpin turns with views that rival the Alps — with a fraction of the crowds.
Painted Monasteries of Bucovina
A UNESCO World Heritage cluster of 15th- and 16th-century monasteries whose exterior walls are covered in vivid frescoes that have survived 500 years of weather. Voroneț is famous worldwide for its unique deep "Voroneț blue."
The Danube Delta
Europe's largest and best-preserved river delta, a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve home to over 300 species of birds including pelicans. Best explored slowly by boat through a maze of reed channels and floating villages.
Săpânța — The Merry Cemetery
A small Maramureș village famous for its colourful, comic gravestones — part folk-art museum, part graveyard, entirely unlike anywhere else in the world. Combine it with the wooden churches of the Maramureș region nearby.