Location | |
---|---|
Country | Metropolitan France |
Continent | Europe |
Regulator | ARCEP |
Type | Closed |
NSN length | 9 |
Format | 0x xx xx xx xx |
Access codes | |
Country code | 33 |
International access | 00 |
Long-distance | 0 |
The French telephone numbering plan is used in Metropolitan France, French overseas departments and some overseas collectivities.
Since 1996, Metropolitan France uses a ten-digit closed numbering plan, where the first two digits denote a geographic area, mobile or non-geographic number.
All geographic numbers are dialed in the ten-digit format, even for local calls. The international access code is the International Telecommunication Union's recommended 00.[1] When calling France from abroad, the leading zero should be omitted: for example, to call a number in Southwest France, one would dial +33 5 xx xx xx xx. French people usually state phone numbers as a sequence of five double-digit numbers, e.g., 0x xx xx xx xx (and not, for example, 0 xxx-xxx-xxx or 0xxx-xx-xxxx or 0xx-xxx-xxxx).[2]
Overseas departments and collectivities have separate country codes and different number formats.
liberation
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).