🇻🇪 Venezuela · Country Code +58

Cheap Calls to Venezuela

from ₽1.0 / min

Affordable calls to any number in Venezuela — mobile or landline. Stay connected with family and friends in Caracas, Maracaibo, Valencia, and across Venezuela at great rates from anywhere in the world.

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Call Rates to Venezuela — 2026

🇷🇺 → 🇻🇪
Russia → Venezuela
Mobile & Landline
from ₽1.0
per minute
🇻🇪 → 🇷🇺
Venezuela → Russia
Mobile numbers
₽1.70
per minute
🇻🇪 → 🏙️
Venezuela → Moscow & St. Petersburg
Landline numbers
₽1.00
per minute
📱 → 📱
Give a Ring user
→ Give a Ring user
Free
always

How to Start Calling Venezuela

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 Venezuelan number

Enter the number in international format (+58 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 Venezuelan Number

Venezuela's country code is +58. Venezuelan numbers are 10 digits locally and always begin with 0. When dialling internationally, drop that leading zero. Caracas landlines start with 0212 — internationally that becomes +58 212. Maracaibo uses 0261 → +58 261. Mobile numbers start with 04: a number like 0412 123 4567 becomes +58 412 123 4567.

Type the full number into the Give a Ring dial pad starting with +58 and the app handles the rest. The call rate is displayed right under the dialled number.

Example — Caracas (landline)
+58 212 123 4567
+58 — Venezuela country code 212 — Caracas area code (drop leading 0) 123 4567 — subscriber number
Example — Venezuelan mobile
+58 412 123 4567
412 — mobile prefix (drop the leading 0)

🇻🇪 Surprising & Funny Facts About Venezuela

💧

The World's Highest Waterfall Drops Farther Than a Cloud

Angel Falls (Salto Ángel) plunges 979 metres — nearly one full kilometre straight down — making it the world's highest uninterrupted waterfall. The water falls so far that much of it turns into mist before it ever hits the ground. It was "discovered" by American pilot Jimmy Angel in 1937 when he crash-landed his plane on the tepui above it. His plane stayed there for 33 years.

The Place Where Lightning Never Stops

Lake Maracaibo is home to the Catatumbo Lightning — an electrical storm that flashes up to 280 times per hour for up to 160 nights a year. It has been called the world's largest generator of ozone and was used as a natural lighthouse by sailors for centuries. Venezuela literally has its own permanent thunderstorm.

👑

More Beauty Queens Than Any Country on Earth

Venezuela has won the Miss Universe and Miss World titles more times than any other country combined. Venezuelans treat beauty pageants with the same seriousness that other nations reserve for the Olympics. There are pageant academies, talent scouts, and entire industries built around it — and the country has been producing winners since the 1950s with remarkable consistency.

🐊

The Llanos: Where Every Animal from Every Nightmare Lives

The Venezuelan Llanos wetlands are home to anacondas, electric eels, piranhas, caimans, capybaras, and more jaguars per square kilometre than almost anywhere else on the planet. It is essentially what would happen if someone asked nature to design a wildlife documentary location without any restrictions. Capybaras — the world's largest rodents — roam here in herds of hundreds.

🏔️

Mountains That Inspired Conan Doyle's "Lost World"

Venezuela's tepui mountains — ancient flat-topped plateaus rising sheer from the jungle — are so isolated that they evolved entirely separate ecosystems. Mount Roraima, the most famous, inspired Arthur Conan Doyle's 1912 novel The Lost World and was used as a visual model for the floating mountains in the film Avatar. Some species on their summits exist nowhere else on Earth.

🛢️

The Country Sitting on the World's Largest Oil Reserves

Venezuela holds the largest proven oil reserves on the planet — surpassing Saudi Arabia since 2011. Lake Maracaibo, where the endless lightning storms occur, sits atop one of the richest oil fields ever discovered. The country that gave the world Simón Bolívar also gave it some of the most dramatic examples of the resource curse in modern history.

🗺️ What Are the Best Places to Visit in Venezuela?

💧

Canaima National Park & Angel Falls

A UNESCO World Heritage Site covering 30,000 km² of tepui plateaus, lagoons, and jungle. The pink-beach lagoons near the park entrance are one of the most surreal natural sights in South America. Angel Falls, accessible by light aircraft and boat, is the jewel of the park and one of the most breathtaking sights on Earth.

🏖️

Los Roques Archipelago

A national park of coral atolls, white-sand beaches, and water so clear and shallow it looks turquoise from space. Los Roques is considered one of the finest sailing and snorkelling destinations in the Caribbean — and because it sits off the beaten tourist track, it remains genuinely unspoilt.

🏔️

Mount Roraima & Gran Sabana

The Gran Sabana is an ancient savanna peppered with tepui plateaus, waterfalls, and indigenous Pemón communities. Trekking to the summit of Mount Roraima — a flat tabletop mountain straddling Venezuela, Brazil, and Guyana — is one of South America's most epic multi-day hikes.

🏛️

Coro — Venezuela's UNESCO Colonial City

The historic centre of Coro and its port La Vela are one of the earliest colonial towns in South America and among the first cities to be declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site on the continent. The adobe architecture, sand dunes, and Caribbean coastline make it unlike anywhere else in Venezuela.

🚡

Mérida & the Andes

The Andean city of Mérida is the adventure capital of Venezuela and was once home to the world's highest cable car, reaching 4,765 m above sea level on Pico Espejo. The surrounding Sierra Nevada National Park offers snow-capped peaks, cloud forests, and Andean villages.

🐆

Los Llanos — Wetland Safari

The vast Llanos plains flood each rainy season, concentrating wildlife in extraordinary densities. A stay at a working cattle ranch (hato) here offers arguably the best wildlife-viewing in South America: giant anteaters, anacondas, caimans, hundreds of bird species, and jaguars encountered far more reliably than in the Amazon.

Frequently Asked Questions

With Give a Ring, calls from Russia to Venezuela start at ₽1.0 per minute in 2026 — significantly cheaper than roaming charges from Russian mobile operators. The exact rate is displayed in the app before you dial.
Venezuela's country code is +58. All Venezuelan numbers are 10 digits locally and start with 0 — drop that leading zero when dialling internationally. Caracas landlines (0212 xxx xxxx) become +58 212 xxx xxxx. Mobile numbers (04xx xxx xxxx) become +58 4xx xxx xxxx — for example, 0412 123 4567 becomes +58 412 123 4567. On the Give a Ring dial pad, start with +58 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 Venezuela right away.
Venezuela is extraordinary for nature lovers. The must-sees include Angel Falls and Canaima National Park (world's highest waterfall, pink-beach lagoons), the Los Roques Archipelago (pristine Caribbean atolls), Mount Roraima and the Gran Sabana (the tepui plateau that inspired The Lost World and Avatar), the colonial city of Coro (UNESCO World Heritage), the Andean city of Mérida, and the wildlife-rich Los Llanos wetlands — arguably the best safari destination in South America.
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 Venezuela Today