The telephone country code for the United Kingdom is +44, and you must drop the trunk prefix 0 from the beginning of the UK domestic telephone number. For example, 07700 900123 becomes +44 7700 900123.
If your cell phone allows you to enter the plus symbol in a telephone number, the most reliable method is to enter the number in international format, beginning with the plus symbol. (The details of how to enter the plus symbol depend on the make and model of your cell phone.) Otherwise, substitute the US international access prefix 011 for the plus symbol.
You just dial the number the same way you do when the UK mobile is in the UK.
From the UK, dial the mobile number; for example, 07700 900123
From a GSM mobile, dial the mobile number in international format: +447700900123
From a US landline or non-GSM mobile, dial 011-44-7700-900123
(The plus sign means "insert your international access prefix here." From a GSM mobile phone, you can enter the number in full international format, starting with the plus sign. The most common prefix is 00, but North America (USA, Canada, etc.) uses 011, Japan uses 010, Australia uses 0011, and many other countries use different prefixes.)
Calling the US is always the easiest of international calls to make. From a cell phone you must first dial the + symbol and the number 1 into the phone. Your dial out number should read +1, the area code (3 digits), then the phone number (7 digits).
you can find this information on http://dialcodeguide.com . You can find what area codes you do to dial to call from any country to any other country.
Dial +1 followed by the ten-digit US number. That's it.
Just dial the UK mobile number, exactly the same way you do when the mobile is in the UK. The physical location of the mobile does not change the way you dial the number.
Step 1. Prefix the US telephone number with +1.
Step 2. You're done.
You can't.
Customers can call 789 from their Virgin Mobile phone to call Virgin Mobile UK. Other customers can call 0845 650 4500.
If the US mobile phone is in international roaming mode, you may be able to dial its normal US number. If the phone has swapped in a UK SIM card, you will need to dial the UK number.
To call a UK-based mobile phone, wherever in the world it may be physically located, you always just dial the UK mobile number the same way you do when the mobile is in the UK. The network will automatically locate the mobile and re-route the call accordingly, and the mobile user will pay any applicable surcharges for roaming.
To call a UK mobile from a UK landline, you always just dial the UK mobile number, exactly the same way you do when it is in the UK. The network will find the mobile automatically, and the mobile user will pay any applicable surcharges for international roaming.
The fact that the UK mobile is in France has no bearing on the cost to the original caller. The caller will pay the normal charge for a call to a UK mobile number, and the mobile user will pay any applicable surcharge for the international roaming.
The mobile phone number remains the same no matter where you take your phone - callers do not have to guess where your phone is before they dial you. In this case, the US caller would call you in the same was as calling any other UK telephone number: international access code 011, then country code 44 for the UK, followed by the full mobile number ignoring the leading zero. For example, 07345 345678 would be dialled as 011 44 7345 345678 from the USA.
Dial: 011 = international access prefix from the US 44 = country code for the UK 7XXX = mobile code (7400 through 7999) (6-digit mobile number) # = pound sign tells the telephone switch not to wait for more possible digits
To call a UK-based mobile phone, anywhere in the world that it may be physically located, just dial the UK mobile numberexactly the same way you do when the mobile is in the UK.
Assuming it's a contact in the phone's memory - just do exactly as you would if both phones were home in he UK. The network will sort out the logistics and connect both phones.
Yes, it is an international call. The rates depend on the calling plan you have with your mobile service provider.
In general, a UK mobile user does not pay for incoming calls, no matter where they originate.