Telephone numbers in Denmark

Denmark telephone numbers
Location
Country Denmark
Continent Europe
Type closed
NSN length 8
Access codes
Country calling code +45
International call prefix 00
Trunk prefix none

Denmark generally uses an eight digit closed telephone numbering plan. Subscriber numbers are portable with respect to provider and geography,[1] i.e. fixed line numbers can be ported to any physical address in Denmark.

Numbering

Designation Range
Reserved for a national or
standard European prefix:[2]
01-xx-xx-xx09-xx-xx-xx
Carrier preselect: 10-xx
Short numbers: 11-x12-x
18-xx
Network access codes: 16-xx-x
Mobile phones: 20-xx-xx-xx31-xx-xx-xx
40-xx-xx-xx42-xx-xx-xx
50-xx-xx-xx53-xx-xx-xx
60-xx-xx-xx61-xx-xx-xx
71-xx-xx-xx
81-xx-xx-xx
91-xx-xx-xx93-xx-xx-xx
Landlines/ISDN: 32-xx-xx-xx36-xx-xx-xx
38-xx-xx-xx39-xx-xx-xx
43-xx-xx-xx49-xx-xx-xx
54-xx-xx-xx59-xx-xx-xx
62-xx-xx-xx66-xx-xx-xx
69-xx-xx-xx
72-xx-xx-xx79-xx-xx-xx
82-xx-xx-xx
86-xx-xx-xx89-xx-xx-xx
96-xx-xx-xx99-xx-xx-xx
M2M numbers: 37-xx-xxxx-xxxx[3]
Spare numbers: 13-xx-xx-xx15-xx-xx-xx
17-xx-xx-xx
19-xx-xx-xx
67-xx-xx-xx68-xx-xx-xx
83-xx-xx-xx85-xx-xx-xx
94-xx-xx-xx95-xx-xx-xx
Split charge numbers: 70-xx-xx-xx
Freephone: 80-xx-xx-xx
Premium Rate: 90-xx-xx-xx

Split charge is not generally used in Denmark anymore; calls to 70 numbers are usually charged as regular landline calls. A few exceptions do exist, e.g., 70 10 11 55 (the TDC speaking clock service).

Special numbers

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, December 13, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.