Call Rates to Vietnam — 2026
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How to Start Calling Vietnam
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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 Vietnamese number
Enter the number in international format (+84 then number without leading zero) and call.
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How to Dial a Vietnamese Number
Vietnam's country code is +84. All Vietnamese numbers begin with 0 locally — drop that leading zero when dialling internationally. Hanoi city numbers start with 024 (becomes +84 24), Ho Chi Minh City numbers start with 028 (becomes +84 28). Mobile numbers typically start with 09x, 08x, 07x, 05x — drop the leading 0.
Type the full number into the Give a Ring dial pad starting with +84 and the app takes care of the rest. The call rate will be shown under the dialled number.
🇻🇳 Surprising & Funny Facts About Vietnam
The Scooter Nation
Hanoi alone has over 7 million registered motorcycles — nearly one per resident. Traffic lights here function more as suggestions than rules. The local wisdom for crossing the road as a foreigner: walk slowly, don't stop, and trust the scooters will flow around you like water around a stone. It actually works.
Phở Is a Religion
Vietnamese people eat phở — the iconic noodle soup — for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Hanoi alone has over 50,000 street stalls, most of them dedicated to phở. The legendary old-town spots open at 5am and have queues by 7am. Some restaurants have served a single dish for three generations. Menu? What menu.
The World's Largest Cave Is Here
Son Doong Cave in Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park is the largest cave on Earth by volume. It's so enormous it contains its own jungle, river, and clouds. A Boeing 747 could fly through it without touching the walls. It was only discovered in 1991 — Vietnam still holds surprises.
A Young Nation Trading With Its Former Enemy
Over 60% of Vietnam's population was born after 1975, making it one of the youngest nations in Asia. The median age is around 31. Here's the twist: the United States — the country Vietnam fought for years — is now Vietnam's number one export partner. History has a sense of humour.
Coffee Made the Unusual Way
Vietnam is the world's second-largest coffee exporter. Its most unique variety is weasel coffee (cà phê chồn): civets eat coffee cherries and the beans, collected from their droppings, are washed and roasted. The stomach enzymes reportedly make the coffee smoother and less bitter. It costs hundreds of dollars per kilo. Bottoms up.
Six Tones, Endless Misunderstandings
Vietnamese is a tonal language: the word "ma" means ghost, mother, horse, rice seedling, cheek, or tomb depending entirely on tone. One wrong inflection turns "I'd like to buy a chicken" into something unprintable. Foreigners attempting Vietnamese are local entertainment. At least they earn respect for trying.
🗺️ Best Places to Visit in Vietnam
Ha Long Bay — Nature's Masterpiece
Over 1,900 limestone karst islands rising from emerald-green waters — a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of Asia's most photographed landscapes. Overnight cruises on traditional wooden junks under a blanket of stars are the definitive Ha Long experience.
Hoi An — City of a Thousand Lanterns
A UNESCO-listed medieval trading port with a perfectly preserved 16th-century old town. Every night the streets fill with coloured silk lanterns reflected in the river. Consistently ranked among the world's most beautiful small cities — and it's hard to argue.
Sapa — Rice Terraces in the Clouds
In the far north near the Chinese border, mountain slopes have been sculpted into cascading rice terraces over centuries — one of the world's great agricultural landscapes. Home to H'mong and Dao ethnic minorities in vivid traditional dress. The sunrise view is otherworldly.
Hue — The Imperial Capital
The former imperial capital of the Nguyen dynasty, with a vast Forbidden City, royal tombs, and ancient pagodas. Hue cuisine is considered the most refined in Vietnam — the legendary "imperial banquet" stretches to 50 courses. This is the only place you can eat like an emperor.
Da Nang — The Golden Bridge & Beaches
Ba Na Hills' Golden Bridge — held up by giant stone hands at 1,400 m elevation — became Vietnam's most viral image overnight. Below, My Khe Beach stretches 30 km and was named one of the world's best beaches by Forbes. Two icons, one city.
Phu Quoc — Tropical Island Paradise
Vietnam's largest island with pristine white-sand beaches, coral reefs, and sunsets worthy of a screensaver. Fifteen years ago it was a fishing village; today it's a fully-fledged resort destination with international hotels, cable cars, and a waterpark. The beaches, fortunately, remain magnificent.