Call Rates to Ukraine — 2026
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Dial a Ukrainian number
Enter the number in international format (+380 then the number without leading zero) and call.
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How to Dial a Ukrainian Number
Ukraine's country code is +380. Ukrainian numbers have 9 digits after the country code. When dialling internationally, drop the leading zero from the subscriber number. A Kyiv landline starting with 044 becomes +380 44, a mobile number starting with 067 becomes +380 67.
Type the full number into the Give a Ring dial pad starting with +380 and the app takes care of the rest.
🇺🇦 Surprising & Interesting Facts About Ukraine
The Largest Country Entirely in Europe
Ukraine covers approximately 600,000 km², making it the largest country with all of its territory inside Europe. France, Germany, and the United Kingdom combined occupy about the same area.
The Breadbasket of the World
Ukraine accounts for around 10% of global wheat exports and is the world's leading exporter of sunflower oil. The secret is the soil: roughly 30% of all chernozem (black earth) on the planet is found in Ukraine. This extraordinarily fertile topsoil took thousands of years of steppe ecology to form.
Kyiv Is Older Than Moscow by 300 Years
Kyiv was founded in the 5th century AD and is one of the oldest capital cities in Europe. At its peak in the 11th century, Kyivan Rus was one of the largest states in Europe, and Kyiv itself had a population rivalling Constantinople and Paris. The city's history stretches back 1,500 years.
Birthplace of the Cossacks
Ukraine is the historical homeland of the Zaporozhian Cossacks — free warrior-farmers who established the Zaporozhian Sich on the island of Khortytsia on the Dnipro River in the 16th century. The Cossacks built their own institutions, developed a unique culture, and had an enormous influence on the history of Eastern Europe.
Birthplace of the Avant-Garde Black Square
Kazimir Malevich, the artist who painted the legendary Black Square and founded Suprematism — one of the most radical movements in modern art — was born in Kyiv. Ukraine also gave the world sculptor Alexander Archipenko and the futurist David Burliuk, exporting artistic revolutions alongside sunflower oil.
Land of Scythians and Greek Colonies
For thousands of years, the steppes of southern Ukraine were home to the Scythians, Sarmatians, and other nomadic peoples. The Black Sea coast was dotted with ancient Greek colonies — Chersonesus (near modern Sevastopol) was founded in the 5th century BC and survived for nearly two thousand years, longer than the Roman Empire.
🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Ukraine?
Kyiv Pechersk Lavra (Cave Monastery)
One of the most sacred Orthodox Christian sites in the Eastern Slavic world, founded in 1051. The monastery complex features famous cave systems with preserved monks' relics, the stunning Dormition Cathedral, and a remarkable collection of church art. The hilltop views over the Dnipro River are unforgettable.
Khotyn Fortress
A magnificent 14th-century castle on the banks of the Dnister River in the Chernivtsi region — one of the best-preserved examples of medieval military architecture in Eastern Europe. The fortress withstood a massive Ottoman siege in 1621, a battle that changed the course of European history.
Odesa — The Pearl of the Black Sea
A legendary port city with extraordinary neoclassical architecture, the famous Potemkin Stairs, and the world's most extensive catacombs system (over 2,500 km of tunnels). Odesa's unique blend of cultures produced one of Eastern Europe's most celebrated traditions of wit, cuisine, and cosmopolitan style.
The Carpathian Mountains
Ukraine's western Carpathians are a scenic mountain region with peaks reaching 2,061 m. The area offers world-class skiing at Bukovel resort, UNESCO-listed ancient wooden churches, thermal springs, and the unique traditions of Hutsul folk culture — a living heritage of carpentry, music, and embroidery.
Chernivtsi — Little Vienna of Ukraine
Chernivtsi earned its nickname for its exceptional late-19th-century architecture. The city was the birthplace of poet Paul Celan, and its university campus (a UNESCO World Heritage Site) is considered one of the most beautiful in Europe — a whimsical blend of Gothic, Baroque, and Byzantine styles that looks like it was designed by a committee of dreamers.