+7

+7 is an ITU country code for telephone numbering. It was originally assigned to the Soviet Union. After the 1991 dissolution of the Soviet Union, the code continued to be used by the fifteen successor states, the majority of whom switched to own country codes from the +3xx and +9xx ranges between 1993 and 1998.

Telephone numbers in Kazakhstan
Location
CountryKazakhstan
ContinentAsia
RegulatorMinistry of Industry and Infrastructure Development of Kazakhstan
TypeOpen
NSN length10
Format(xxx) xxx-xx-xx[nb 1]
Access codes
Country code+7
International access008, 009, 010
Long-distance008
Telephone numbers in Russia
Location
CountryRussia
ContinentEurasia
RegulatorMinistry of Telecom and Mass Communications of the Russian Federation
TypeOpen; closed in Moscow
NSN length10
Format(xxx) xxx-xx-xx
(xxxx) xx-xx-xx
(xxxxx) x-xx-xx
(xxxxxx) xx-xx
Access codes
Country code+7
International access8~10 [nb 2]
Long-distance8

Currently, the +7 country code is only assigned by ITU to two countries: Kazakhstan and Russia.

Russia has allocated subsets of its national numbering range to the unrecognised entities of Abkhazia and South Ossetia as well as to the captured territories of Ukraine (Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol), all of whom are reachable using +7.

Allocation table

The following is the national code allocation table in the +7 range:

First digit of codeRouted to
0Reserved for trunk prefix[1]
1Reserved for special services
2Kazakhstan – reserved for common usage
3Russia – geographic numbering
4Russia – geographic numbering
5Reserved
6Kazakhstan[2]
7Kazakhstan – geographic numbering (71x and 72x), mobile telephony (70x and 77x) and other services (75x and 76x)[3][2]
8Russia – geographic numbering (including 869 Sevastopol, 840 Abkhazia and 850 South Ossetia[4]), Toll-Free, and Pay-Line (for common usage with Kazakhstan and Abkhazia)
9Russia – mobile telephony (including 940 Abkhazia and 998 South Ossetia) and paylines[4]

Notes

  1. "-" may not appear sometimes
  2. "~" means "wait for the next dial tone"

See also

References

  1. "Mockba" (PDF). Cdnimg.rg.ru. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  2. International Telecom Union – Kazakhstan – Administration of the Republic of Kazakhstan (PDF), 2012-11-13, archived (PDF) from the original on 2012-09-07, retrieved 2014-06-12
  3. Agency of the Republic of Kazakhstan for Informatization and Communication. "Communication of 7.II.2012". ITU. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 11 April 2012.
  4. "Россия предоставила Южной Осетии во временное пользование свои телефонные коды". Министерство цифрового развития, связи и массовых коммуникаций Российской Федерации (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2019-07-15. Retrieved 2019-07-15.
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