This article contains a list of
area codes in
Brazil for telephone dialing. The area codes are distributed geographically, citing the main cities in each area.
Local phone numbers in Brazil observe an eight-digit pattern (nnnn-nnnn) for
landlines and nine digits (nnnnn-nnnn) for
mobile phones. Mobile numbers share the same geographic area codes as landlines, but the first digit differentiates them. Landline numbers start with digits 2 through 5. Initial digits 6 through 9 are reserved for mobile numbers, but as of 2017 all mobile numbers in Brazil start with the digit 9. (There is an exception for some
iDEN mobile lines operated by
Nextel, which are eight digits long and start with 7 and disestablished in 2018.)
Area codes have two digits, and are often notated between parentheses: (aa) nnnn-nnnn. For
long-distance callswithin Brazil, a zero (0) must be dialed first, then a carrier selection code (for example, 21 for
Embratel and 41 for
TIM Brasil), then the two-digit area code, then the local number. For example, to call the number 2222-2222 in
Fortaleza (area code 85) using
Oi (selection code 31) as the chosen carrier, one would dial 0 31 85 2222 2222.
For
international callsto Brazil, the international access code used in the calling country must be dialed (for example, 011 from the
United States and
Canada, 00 from
Europe and most other countries, or the actual "+" sign from some mobile networks), then Brazil's country code 55, then the two-digit area code, then the local eight- or nine-digit number. For example, to call the number 3333-3333 in
Rio de Janeiro (area code 21) from Europe, one would dial 00 55 21 3333 3333.
In a few exceptional cases, some area codes span state borders to cater for tightly integrated interstate communities:
Two villages straddle the Preto river on the
Minas Gerais–
Rio de Janeiro state border. So, the village of Maringá (not to be confused with the
homonymous large city in the State of
Paraná) lies partly in the Rio de Janeiro municipality of
Itatiaia and partly in the Minas Gerais municipality of
Bocaina de Minas, while the village of Porto das Flores is divided between the municipalities of
Rio das Flores (Rio de Janeiro) and
Belmiro Braga (Minas Gerais). Both sides of these villages use the Rio de Janeiro area code 24. Outside these villages, their respective Minas Gerais municipalities use the proper regional area code 32.
Two border cities in the State of
Paraná are contiguous with larger cities in
Santa Catarina and use area codes from the latter state:
Rio Negro (contiguous with
Mafra) uses area code 47, and
Barracão (contiguous with
Dionísio Cerqueira) uses area code 49.
The cities of
Barão de Grajaú and
Alto Parnaíba, in the State of
Maranhão, are respectively conurbated with
Floriano and
Santa Filomena, in the State of
Piauí, and use the latter state's area code 89 for landlines. Most local mobile phones in Alto Parnaíba, though, use Southern Maranhão area code 99. Also in Maranhão, the city of
Timon, which is next to the Piauí capital city of
Teresina, formerly used northern Piauí area code 86, but now it uses the Maranhão area code 99.
Area code 61 primarily serves the
Federal District (comprising the national capital city,
Brasília), but it also serves some surrounding municipalities in the State of
Goiás, such as
Formosa,
Valparaíso de Goiás and
Luziânia. Formerly, area code 61 was even larger and used to include northwestern
Minas Gerais (
Unaí,
Paracatu), now in that state's area code 38.
Until the 1990s, the city of
Paranaíba, in the state of
Mato Grosso do Sul and served by Companhia Telefônica do Brasil Central (now
Algar Telecom) used the code 176. Today, this city, like the others in this state, use the area code 67. Until 1997, the city of
Fronteira was connected to the network of the municipality of
Icém, which used the code 172, and this year the network was transferred to Companhia Telefônica do Brasil Central and started to use the area code 34.