|  Administrative division of Moldova corresponding to geographical numbers prefix division | |
| Location | |
|---|---|
| Country | Moldova | 
| Continent | Europe | 
| Regulator | ANRCETIS | 
| Type | Closed | 
| NSN length | 10( with 0 and 9digits) | 
| Format | 0ABCDEFGHI | 
| Access codes | |
| Country code | +373 | 
| International access | 00 | 
| Long-distance | 0 | 
On February 1, 2004 Moldova introduced a new closed telephone numbering plan with an open dialing plan.[1] The country code is +373, adopted in 1993.[2] Previously, when Moldova was part of the Soviet Union, it used the country code +7 and the area code 0422.[3]
Numbering scheme
Telephone numbers in Moldova follow an open numbering plan and consist of 8 national significant numbers (NSN). The National Significant Number consists of 2-3 digits for the National Destination Code and 5-6 digits for the Subscriber Number (SN).
National destination code
National destination codes are allocated as follows:[4]
| N(S)N Format | Assignment | Number types | 
| 1XX | Special service numbers | |
| 2XX | Fixed-line telephony | Geographic | 
| 3XX | ||
| 4XX | Long-term strategic reserve | |
| 5XX | ||
| 6XX | Mobile telephony | Non-geographic | 
| 7XX | ||
| 8XX | Freephone and shared-cost services | Non-geographic | 
| 9XX | Premium services | Non-geographic | 
The trunk prefix in Moldova is 0.
Area codes
| List of area codes[5] | |
|---|---|
| Area Code[6] | Area/City | 
| 210 and 310 | Grigoriopol | 
| 215 and 315 | Dubasari | 
| 216 and 316 | Camenca | 
| 219 and 319 | Dnestrovsc | 
| 22 and 32 | Chișinău | 
| 230 and 330 | Soroca | 
| 231 and 331 | Bălți | 
| 235 and 335 | Orhei | 
| 236 and 336 | Ungheni | 
| 237 and 337 | Strășeni | 
| 241 and 341 | Cimișlia | 
| 242 and 342 | Ștefan Vodă | 
| 243 and 343 | Căușeni | 
| 244 and 344 | Călărași | 
| 246 and 346 | Edineț | 
| 247 and 347 | Briceni | 
| 248 and 348 | Criuleni | 
| 249 and 349 | Glodeni | 
| 250 and 350 | Florești | 
| 251 and 351 | Dondușeni | 
| 252 and 352 | Drochia | 
| 254 and 354 | Rezina | 
| 256 and 356 | Rîșcani | 
| 258 and 358 | Telenești | 
| 259 and 359 | Fălești | 
| 262 and 362 | Sîngerei | 
| 263 and 363 | Leova | 
| 264 and 364 | Nisporeni | 
| 265 and 365 | Anenii Noi | 
| 268 and 368 | Ialoveni | 
| 269 and 369 | Hîncești | 
| 271 and 371 | Ocnița | 
| 272 and 372 | Șoldănești | 
| 273 and 373 | Cantemir | 
| 291 and 391 | Ceadîr-Lunga | 
| 293 and 393 | Vulcănești | 
| 294 and 394 | Taraclia | 
| 297 and 397 | Basarabeasca | 
| 298 and 398 | Comrat | 
| 299 and 399 | Cahul | 
| 533 and 433 | Tiraspol | 
| 552 and 452 | Bender | 
| 555 and 455 | Rybnitsa | 
| 557 and 457 | Slobozia | 
Dialling example
- 07xx-xxx-xxx – call within Chişinău
- 02xx-xxx-xxx – call between other localities in Moldova
- 0xxx-xxx-xxx – call between localities and mobile phone companies
- +373-0xxx-xxx-xxx – call between Moldova and Transnistria
References
- ↑ telephone numbering plan
- ↑ Who's Who in Russia and the New States, Leonard Geron, Alex Pravda, Bloomsbury Academic, 1993, page 13
- ↑ The World Factbook, 1993, page 260
- ↑ "Resurse atribuite | ANRCETI". www.anrceti.md. Retrieved 2022-07-12.
- ↑ "National Numbering Plan | ANRCETI".
- ↑ "Apelurile la telefonul fix, doar prin 9 cifre din 1 iulie 2012 - Economic - Jurnal.md". Archived from the original on 2012-01-14. Retrieved 2012-10-28.
External links
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