Call Rates to Spain — 2026
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Dial a Spanish number
Enter the number in international format (+34 followed by the full 9-digit number) and call.
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How to Dial a Spanish Number
Spain's country code is +34. Spanish numbers are always 9 digits long and — unlike many countries — have no leading zero. That makes dialling refreshingly simple: just add +34 before the complete 9-digit number exactly as it appears.
Madrid numbers start with 91, Barcelona with 93. Mobile numbers start with 6 or 7. Type the full number into the Give a Ring dial pad starting with +34 and the call rate will appear beneath it.
🇪🇸 Surprising & Funny Facts About Spain
Spain Lives in the Wrong Time Zone
Geographically, Spain sits on the same longitude as the UK and should be in UTC+0. Instead, since 1940 it uses UTC+1 (UTC+2 in summer) — Franco moved the clocks to align with Hitler's Berlin time. The practical result: lunch is at 3pm, dinner at 10pm, and "late" starts around midnight. Spain has been jet-lagged for over 80 years.
A Tomato Fight Nobody Goes Hungry At
Every August in Buñol, Valencia, the La Tomatina festival sees participants hurl roughly 150 tonnes of ripe tomatoes at each other for exactly one hour. It started in 1945 when a brawl near a vegetable stall got completely out of hand, and the locals decided to repeat it the following year. Because why not?
The Country of Siestas That Doesn't Sleep Enough
Yes, Spain really does have long midday breaks — shops close, streets empty. And yet Spain is among the most sleep-deprived nations in Europe, averaging around 6.5 hours per night, well below WHO recommendations. The siesta exists. It's just clearly not enough.
The Cathedral Under Construction for 140+ Years
Barcelona's Sagrada Família, designed by Antoni Gaudí, began construction in 1882 and is still not finished. Completion is expected around 2026. When asked about the slow pace, Gaudí reportedly said: "My client is not in a hurry" — referring to God. No one has been able to argue with that reasoning.
The Bull That Beat an Advertising Ban
The iconic black Osborne bull silhouette has stood along Spanish roadsides since 1956 — originally a brandy advertisement. When billboard advertising was banned in 1994, courts ruled the bulls had become part of Spain's cultural heritage and exempted them. Around 90 of these four-metre-tall iron bulls still overlook Spanish highways today.
12 Grapes at Midnight — or Bad Luck Awaits
Every New Year's Eve, Spaniards eat 12 grapes — one per bell strike at midnight from Madrid's Puerta del Sol clock. The tradition dates to 1909, invented by Alicante grape growers who needed to shift a bumper harvest. The marketing trick worked so perfectly that it became a non-negotiable national ritual. Miss a grape? The whole year goes wrong.
🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Spain?
Barcelona — Gaudí's City
The Sagrada Família, Park Güell, Casa Batlló, and Casa Milà — Barcelona is essentially one architect's fever dream made real. Add the Gothic Quarter, the famous Las Ramblas promenade, and Mediterranean beaches 20 minutes from the centre.
Madrid — Royal Capital
The Prado Museum holds one of the world's great art collections. The Royal Palace is one of Europe's largest. The Puerta del Sol and Plaza Mayor anchor the old city. And Madrid is one of the few European capitals where restaurants are still packed at 2am on a Tuesday.
Seville — Soul of Andalusia
The third-largest cathedral in the world, the Alcázar palace (used as Dorne in Game of Thrones), and the Triana neighbourhood — the cradle of flamenco. Orange trees line the streets; the fruit is too bitter to eat and gets exported to Britain to make marmalade.
Granada — Moorish Masterpiece
The Alhambra palace complex is one of the finest examples of Moorish architecture in the world — intricate carved walls reflected in still pools, with snow-capped Sierra Nevada behind it. UNESCO listed, irreplaceable, and genuinely breath-taking.
Mallorca & the Canary Islands
Mallorca offers turquoise coves, the Tramuntana mountains, and medieval hilltop villages. The Canaries — off the African coast but thoroughly Spanish — offer volcanic landscapes on Tenerife and Lanzarote, Atlantic beaches on Gran Canaria, and summer all year round.
Bilbao & the Guggenheim
A workaday industrial city transformed into a cultural destination by a single building: Frank Gehry's titanium Guggenheim Museum (1997). So dramatic was the effect that urban planners coined "the Bilbao Effect" — the idea that one extraordinary building can entirely reinvent a city's identity.