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Cheap Calls from Melbourne to China

Make affordable international calls from Melbourne, Australia to China πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³. Rates from $0.20/min with no app required.

Landline Rates
$0.20/min
Mobile Rates
$0.26/min
Dial Code
+86

Calling China from Melbourne

Melbourne, with a population of 5.1 million, is a major city in Australia πŸ‡¦πŸ‡Ί with a significant community that maintains connections to China πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³. Whether you have family, friends, or business contacts in China, making international calls from Melbourne doesn't have to be expensive.

Traditional phone carriers in Australia charge premium rates for international calls to China, often between $1.50 and $3.00 per minute. DialAnyone lets residents of Melbourne call China for as little as $0.20 per minute β€” saving up to 90% on every call. All you need is an internet connection and a web browser.

Melbourne's modern telecommunications infrastructure means you'll enjoy crystal-clear HD voice quality on every call to China. DialAnyone uses WebRTC technology, the same standard used by major tech companies for voice and video calls, ensuring reliable connections to cities like Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and beyond.

The View from Melbourne

Melbourne's outer suburbs β€” Springvale, Noble Park, Footscray, Dandenong β€” read like a map of postwar and post-1975 migration flows, and the calling patterns from those suburbs are correspondingly dense. Vietnamese families in Springvale call Ho Chi Minh City and the Mekong Delta; Cambodian and Lao communities in Dandenong call Phnom Penh and Vientiane; Ethiopian and Eritrean families in the western suburbs call Addis Ababa and Asmara. The CBD and inner-city postcodes run a different kind of international traffic: international students from China and India on student visas, calling home on the dormitory Wi-Fi within hours of landing. Australia's mobile market is dominated by Telstra, Optus and TPG-Vodafone, with a dense MVNO layer underneath. Postpaid plans from the majors now typically bundle unlimited calls to a list of selected countries β€” often including the UK, USA and New Zealand but not necessarily Vietnam, Ethiopia or Cambodia. Residents whose families are outside the standard bundle countries face carrier IDD rates that can still be startling on a monthly bill. That gap between the bundled-destination world and the actual-calling-destination world is where a significant share of Melbourne's international traffic moves.

Melbourne's International Communities

Melbourne has one of the largest Vietnamese communities in Australia, concentrated in the southeastern corridor from Richmond to Springvale, and that community's calling corridor to southern Vietnam is among the city's busiest. The Indian community spans a wide range of origin regions β€” Punjabi, Gujarati, Tamil and Telugu communities all with distinct overseas networks β€” and has grown substantially through the skilled migration and international student pathways. The Chinese community, both long-established and newly arrived, keeps multiple provincial connections active. Sri Lankan Tamil families in the northern and eastern suburbs maintain ties to Colombo and Jaffna. Somali and Ethiopian communities in the west add East African corridors. Melbourne's diversity is not ornamental; it directly determines which overseas phone numbers ring most often.

Time Difference: Melbourne to China

China is 2 hours behind Melbourne.

Time in MelbourneTime in China
8:00 AM6:00 AM
12:00 PM10:00 AM
5:00 PM3:00 PM
9:00 PM7:00 PM

To catch people during waking hours in China (9 AM to 9 PM), call between 11:00 AM and 11:00 PM Melbourne time β€” that lands between 9:00 AM and 9:00 PM local time in China.

How to Call China from Melbourne

1
Open DialAnyone in Your Browser
From Melbourne, simply open dialanyone.com on your phone, tablet, or computer. No app download required.
2
Create a Free Account
Sign up in under a minute. No credit card required to get started.
3
Enter the China Number
Type the China phone number with country code +86. DialAnyone will auto-format it for you.
4
Click Call
That's it! Your call connects instantly from Melbourne to China in HD quality.

Dialing China from Melbourne: Number Format

When calling China from Melbourne using a traditional phone, you need the international dialing prefix followed by the China country code (+86). The format is:

IDD + CN + local number

The international dialing prefix (IDD) from Australia is "0011" (or "+" from mobile phones). A complete dialed number looks like 0011 8613123456789. With DialAnyone, you can skip the IDD entirely β€” just enter the China number in the format +8613123456789 and DialAnyone handles the routing.

China's primary language is Mandarin Chinese. If you need translation assistance during calls, DialAnyone offers real-time AI translation for seamless communication between Melbourne and China.

Melbourne to China: Rate Comparison

Calling MethodRate to ChinaSavings
Traditional Carrier$1.50-3.00/min0%
Calling Card$0.10-0.50/min50-70%
VoIP App (requires download)$0.05-0.15/min70-85%
DialAnyone (no app needed)$0.20/minUp to 90%

Why Melbourne Residents Choose DialAnyone for China

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Call any phone number in China β€” landline or mobile β€” directly from Melbourne
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Rates from Melbourne to China start at just $0.20/min
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No app download required β€” call from any browser in Melbourne
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Save up to 90% compared to Australia carrier international rates
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HD voice quality using WebRTC technology over Melbourne's internet
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Credits never expire β€” buy once, use whenever you need to call China
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Works on any device: phone, tablet, laptop, or desktop computer
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Send SMS to China from Melbourne at low rates too

Telecommunications in China

China boasts one of the most advanced telecommunications infrastructures in the world, driven by a competitive landscape dominated by three main mobile network operators: China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom. As of 2023, China had over 1.6 billion mobile phone users, reflecting a penetration rate that exceeds 100% due to the prevalence of dual SIM cards. The country has rapidly expanded its 4G and 5G network coverage, with 5G services available in most urban areas, providing high-speed internet access and supporting a range of IoT applications. Landline services are still prevalent, particularly in rural areas, but mobile phones have become the primary means of communication for most citizens. The Chinese government has also made significant investments in expanding fiber-optic networks, ensuring that both urban and rural populations have access to reliable internet services. This robust infrastructure enables seamless communication, making it easy for residents to connect both domestically and internationally.

Dialing China from Abroad

To make an international call to China, you need to follow a specific dialing format. Start by dialing your country's international access code, which varies by country (for example, 011 in the United States, 00 in the UK). Next, dial China’s country code, which is +86. After that, enter the area code, which varies by city; for example, Beijing is 10, Shanghai is 21, and Guangzhou is 20. If you’re calling a mobile number, you do not need to include an area code; simply dial the mobile number following the country code. In most cases, mobile numbers in China begin with the digit "1" followed by a 10-digit number. It’s important to remember that if you are calling a landline from a mobile phone, you should omit the initial "0" from the area code. For example, when calling Beijing, you would dial your international access code +86 10 followed by the local number.

Best Times to Call China from Melbourne

China operates on China Standard Time (CST), which is UTC+8. This time zone is consistent across the entire country, despite its vast geographical size. Typical business hours are from 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM CST, Monday to Friday, making this the most suitable window for business calls. Personal calls can be made in the evenings after work hours, generally between 7:00 PM and 9:00 PM CST, though weekends are also popular for personal conversations. It's wise to be aware of national holidays, such as Chinese New Year and National Day, when many people may be unavailable for calls due to family gatherings or vacations. Additionally, during busy periods such as the Spring Festival travel season, individuals may be less accessible. Understanding these nuances can enhance the effectiveness of your communication.

Calling Etiquette in China

When making phone calls to China, understanding the local communication culture is essential. Typically, calls are answered with a polite "ε–‚" (wΓ¨i), which translates to "hello." In formal situations, it may be appropriate to use the person's title followed by their surname. Cold calling is generally less accepted in China, especially in business contexts; establishing a prior relationship or introduction is often preferred. For personal calls, a casual greeting is acceptable among friends and family. In business, it’s important to be respectful and straightforward, as indirect communication styles may be perceived as evasive. Preferred communication channels can vary; while phone calls are common, many younger generations favor messaging apps like WeChat for both personal and professional correspondence, making it an essential tool for communication in China.

Mobile vs Landline Numbers in China

Every Chinese mobile number begins with 1 after the +86 country code β€” 13x, 14x, 15x, 17x, 18x, and 19x ranges are all mobile, assigned across China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom. Number portability has softened the old rule of reading the carrier off the prefix, but the leading 1 is still the clearest signal you have a cell number. Geographic landlines carry city area codes: 10 for Beijing, 21 for Shanghai, 20 for Guangzhou. The area code is included after +86 with no leading zero. One important practical note: calls from foreign numbers β€” particularly VoIP or VOIP-identified numbers β€” are increasingly blocked, screened, or answered with suspicion. Many contacts in China will not pick up an unfamiliar international number without prior notice, so a message on WeChat before you call is not merely courteous, it's often what determines whether the call connects at all.

Why Melbourne Callers Switch to VoIP

Telstra and Optus bundle certain international destinations into postpaid plans, which sounds useful until you check whether your specific destination is actually in the bundle. Vietnam, Cambodia, Ethiopia and the Philippines β€” the corridors that matter most to large chunks of Melbourne's population β€” are often excluded or priced separately. Optus and Telstra prepaid credit can be used for international calls, but the per-minute rates to Southeast Asia and Africa on those plans remain multiple times higher than data-based alternatives. Melbourne's NBN rollout has given the suburban heartland of its diaspora communities genuinely fast home internet, and LTE coverage across the southeastern corridor from Richmond to Dandenong is solid. The case is simple: call Vietnam over the NBN connection rather than via Telstra IDD, and the monthly cost of keeping in touch drops to something that doesn't require a calculation before each call.

Saving on Regular Calls to China

China Standard Time (UTC+8) never shifts β€” no daylight saving, ever β€” so the math from Western time zones stays constant year-round. From the US East Coast, that's a 12 or 13-hour gap depending on US daylight saving; the workday overlap is narrow. The most reliable window for reaching business contacts is late morning Beijing time, which means early evening or overnight in North America and Europe. Golden Week (first week of October) and Chinese New Year (typically late January or early February, lasting two full weeks for many businesses) are the two stretches when almost nothing moves professionally. A call to a corporate landline during those periods often reaches an automated message. If you call regularly, build a habit around the recipient's schedule rather than your own β€” a fixed slot they expect is the single most reliable way to get picked up.

How China Rates Compare

At 24 credits per minute (about $0.20/min), calling China is around the global average on DialAnyone. For context, here is how it stacks up against other popular destinations called from Melbourne:

India
$0.09/min
Mexico
$0.0025/min
Philippines
$0.18/min

Who Calls China from Melbourne?

Families & Friends
People in Melbourne staying connected with loved ones in China. Regular calls to check in, celebrate milestones, and maintain bonds across borders.
Business Professionals
Melbourne-based businesses with clients, suppliers, or partners in China. Professional calls at a fraction of traditional international rates.
Expat Communities
China expats living in Melbourne who need to call home regularly for family matters, legal issues, or staying in touch with their roots.
Travelers & Students
People in Melbourne planning trips to China, or students maintaining connections while studying abroad in Australia.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I call China from Melbourne?β–Ό
From a regular phone in Melbourne, dial 0011 (the Australia exit code), then 86, then the local number without its leading zero β€” for example 0011 8613123456789. With DialAnyone, just open your browser, enter the number as +8613123456789, and click call β€” the international routing is handled automatically. Rates start at $0.20/min.
What is the cheapest way to call China from Melbourne?β–Ό
DialAnyone offers the cheapest calls from Melbourne to China starting at $0.20/min. Traditional carriers from Australia typically charge $1-3/min for international calls. With DialAnyone's VoIP technology, you save up to 90% on every call. No monthly fees, no contracts β€” just pay-as-you-go credits.
Can I call mobile phones in China from Melbourne?β–Ό
Yes! DialAnyone lets you call both mobile and landline numbers in China directly from Melbourne. Mobile rates to China start at $0.26/min and landline rates from $0.20/min. The recipient doesn't need any app β€” their phone rings normally.
What time should I call China from Melbourne?β–Ό
China is 2 hours behind Melbourne. To reach people during waking hours there (9 AM to 9 PM), call between 11:00 AM and 11:00 PM Melbourne time β€” that's 9:00 AM and 9:00 PM in China. DialAnyone works 24/7, so you can call whenever convenient.
Do I need an app to call China from Melbourne?β–Ό
No app needed. DialAnyone works directly in your web browser from Melbourne or anywhere in Australia. Just go to dialanyone.com, log in, and start calling China. Works on any device β€” phone, tablet, or computer β€” as long as you have an internet connection.
Is the call quality good when calling China from Melbourne?β–Ό
Yes. DialAnyone uses HD VoIP technology (WebRTC) to deliver crystal-clear calls from Melbourne to China. Melbourne's modern internet infrastructure ensures excellent call quality. The audio quality is typically better than traditional phone calls.

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