🇸🇰 Slovakia · Country Code +421

Cheap Calls to Slovakia

from ₽0.4 / min

Affordable calls to any number in Slovakia — mobile or landline. Stay connected with family and friends in Bratislava, Košice, and beyond at great rates from anywhere in the world.

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Call Rates to Slovakia — 2026

🇷🇺 → 🇸🇰
Russia → Slovakia
Mobile & Landline
from ₽0.4
per minute
🇸🇰 → 🇷🇺
Slovakia → Russia
Mobile numbers
₽1.70
per minute
🇸🇰 → 🏙️
Slovakia → Moscow & St. Petersburg
Landline numbers
₽1.00
per minute
📱 → 📱
Give a Ring user
→ Give a Ring user
Free
always

How to Start Calling Slovakia

1

Install the app

Download Give a Ring from Google Play or Apple 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 Slovak number

Enter the number in international format (+421 then the number without leading zero) and call.

4

Sign-up Bonus

Get a bonus for calls when you sign up!

How to Dial a Slovak Number

Slovakia's country code is +421. All Slovak numbers begin with 0 locally. When dialling internationally, drop that leading zero. The Bratislava city code is 2, so a local number 02 123 45 678 becomes +421 2 123 45 678. Mobile numbers start with 09x — drop the leading zero: 0912 345 678 becomes +421 912 345 678.

Type the full number into the Give a Ring dial pad starting with +421 and the app takes care of the rest. The call rate will be displayed under the dialled number before you connect.

Example — Bratislava (landline)
+421 2 123 45 678
+421 — Slovakia country code 2 — Bratislava city code (no leading zero) 123 45 678 — subscriber number
Example — Slovak mobile
+421 912 345 678
912 — mobile prefix (drop the leading 0)

🇸🇰 Surprising & Funny Facts About Slovakia

🏰

The Castle Capital of Europe

Slovakia has more castles and fortresses per square kilometre than almost any other country in the world — over 180 in total. Many of them stand as atmospheric ruins in the middle of forests, belonging to no one, slowly crumbling in gorgeous isolation. It's medieval post-apocalypse, but make it picturesque.

🌍

The (Disputed) Centre of Europe

Slovakia claims that the geographical centre of Europe lies on its territory — in the village of Kráľovany. The only catch: Ukraine, Belarus, Lithuania, and Poland make the exact same claim. The centre of Europe is less a fixed point and more a highly competitive popularity contest that nobody has officially won.

🍺

Beer Cheaper Than Water — Literally

In many Slovak pubs and restaurants, a 0.5-litre draught beer costs less than a glass of mineral water. This is not a promotional trick — it's just Central European economics at work. Slovak locals don't find this remarkable. They simply order another round.

🎻

Home of the World's Longest Folk Dance

The Slovak folk dance Verchovina entered the Guinness World Records as the longest organised folk dance chain, with thousands of participants dancing simultaneously. Slovakia holds world records not with oversized pies or rubber ducks — but with traditional dance. Priorities are clearly in order.

🦅

A Country That's Younger Than the Internet

Slovakia only became an independent state on 1 January 1993 — when the Czechoslovak federation peacefully dissolved in what historians called the "Velvet Divorce." No wars, no conflicts, just two nations agreeing to go their separate ways. Slovakia and the Czech Republic are still the best of friends, which arguably makes this the most civilised breakup in modern history.

🧀

Bryndza: A Cheese Protected by EU Law

Slovak bryndza — a soft, tangy sheep's milk cheese — is so central to national identity that the EU granted it Protected Designation of Origin status. The national dish, bryndzové halušky (potato dumplings with bryndza and bacon), is what every Slovak considers the ultimate comfort food. There is no substitute. Ask any Slovak — they will tell you at length.

🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Slovakia?

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Bratislava — Small Capital, Big Charm

A compact Old Town of cobbled lanes and baroque palaces, a castle perched on a cliff above the Danube, and a surprisingly lively nightlife scene. Bratislava is one of the few European capitals you can explore completely on foot in a single day — and still want more.

🗿

Spiš Castle — A Medieval Giant

One of the largest castle complexes in Central Europe and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, spread across more than 4 hectares atop a rocky hill. The panoramic view from the top over the Slovak lowlands is the kind that stays with you long after you leave.

⛷️

High Tatras — Slovakia's Alpine Crown

The smallest "true" alpine range in Europe, but with scenery that rivals Switzerland. The resorts of Jasná, Tatranská Lomnica, and Štrbské Pleso offer world-class skiing in winter and dramatic hiking in summer. Mountain lake Štrbské Pleso looks like a postcard you want to keep forever.

🕳️

Dobšiná Ice Cave — Frozen in Time

A UNESCO-listed cave with permanent ice formations thousands of years old. Even in midsummer the temperature inside drops to –5°C, and ice stalagmites rise several metres from the floor. One of Europe's largest ice caves — and easily the most spectacular in the region.

💎

Banská Štiavnica — The Silver Town

A medieval mining town listed in its entirety as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Once one of the wealthiest cities in Europe thanks to its silver mines, it is now a quiet, impossibly beautiful maze of baroque streets that most tourists simply never find. Their loss, your gain.

♨️

Piešťany — Thermal Spa Since the 16th Century

One of the oldest and most famous balneological resorts in Central Europe, where sulphurous thermal springs have been treating ailments since the 1500s. The city's symbol is a man snapping his crutches — because according to legend, the hopeless came here and walked away healed.

Frequently Asked Questions

With Give a Ring, calls from Russia to Slovakia start at ₽0.4 per minute in 2026 — among the lowest rates available to any EU country, and significantly cheaper than roaming charges from Russian mobile operators. The exact rate is displayed in the app before you dial.
Slovakia's country code is +421. All Slovak local numbers begin with 0 — drop that leading zero when dialling internationally. A Bratislava landline "02 123 45 678" becomes "+421 2 123 45 678"; a mobile "0912 345 678" becomes "+421 912 345 678". On the Give a Ring dial pad, just start with +421 and type the rest — the app handles formatting automatically.
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 Slovakia right away.
Slovakia is compact but remarkably varied. Must-sees include Bratislava (castle, Old Town, Danube), Spiš Castle (UNESCO, one of Europe's largest medieval fortresses), the High Tatras (ski resorts of Jasná and Štrbské Pleso), the Dobšiná Ice Cave (UNESCO), the silver-mining town of Banská Štiavnica (UNESCO), and the thermal spa at Piešťany. The country also has over 180 castles scattered across its landscape — many in dramatic ruin — making it a paradise for history lovers.
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 Slovakia Today

From ₽0.4 per minute. No SIM card. Works on Wi-Fi & 4G.