Make affordable international calls from Melbourne, Australia to Switzerland . Rates from $0.00/min with no app required.
Landline Rates
$0.00/min
Mobile Rates
$0.00/min
Dial Code
+CH
Calling Switzerland from Melbourne
Melbourne, with a population of 5.1 million, is a major city in Australia 🇦🇺 with a significant community that maintains connections to Switzerland . Whether you have family, friends, or business contacts in Switzerland, making international calls from Melbourne doesn't have to be expensive.
Traditional phone carriers in Australia charge premium rates for international calls to Switzerland, often between $1.50 and $3.00 per minute. DialAnyone lets residents of Melbourne call Switzerland for as little as $0.00 per minute — 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 Switzerland. DialAnyone uses WebRTC technology, the same standard used by major tech companies for voice and video calls, ensuring reliable connections.
The View from Melbourne
Melbourne's outer suburbs — Springvale, Noble Park, Footscray, Dandenong — 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 — 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 Global Connections
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 — Punjabi, Gujarati, Tamil and Telugu communities all with distinct overseas networks — 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 Switzerland
Switzerland is 8 hours behind Melbourne.
Time in Melbourne
Time in Switzerland
8:00 AM
12:00 AM
12:00 PM
4:00 AM
5:00 PM
9:00 AM
9:00 PM
1:00 PM
To catch people during waking hours in Switzerland (9 AM to 9 PM), call between 5:00 PM and 11:00 PM Melbourne time — that lands between 9:00 AM and 3:00 PM local time in Switzerland.
How to Call Switzerland 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 Switzerland Number
Type the Switzerland phone number with country code +CH. DialAnyone will auto-format it for you.
4
Click Call
That's it! Your call connects instantly from Melbourne to Switzerland in HD quality.
Dialing Switzerland from Melbourne: Number Format
When calling Switzerland from Melbourne using a traditional phone, you need the international dialing prefix followed by the Switzerland country code (+CH). The format is:
IDD + CH + local number
The international dialing prefix (IDD) from Australia is "0011" (or "+" from mobile phones). A complete dialed number looks like 0011 41781234567. With DialAnyone, you can skip the IDD entirely — just enter the Switzerland number in the format +41781234567 and DialAnyone handles the routing.
Melbourne to Switzerland: Rate Comparison
Calling Method
Rate to Switzerland
Savings
Traditional Carrier
$1.50-3.00/min
0%
Calling Card
$0.10-0.50/min
50-70%
VoIP App (requires download)
$0.05-0.15/min
70-85%
DialAnyone (no app needed)
$0.00/min
Up to 90%
Why Melbourne Residents Choose DialAnyone for Switzerland
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Call any phone number in Switzerland — landline or mobile — directly from Melbourne
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Rates from Melbourne to Switzerland start at just $0.00/min
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No app download required — 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 — buy once, use whenever you need to call Switzerland
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Works on any device: phone, tablet, laptop, or desktop computer
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Send SMS to Switzerland from Melbourne at low rates too
Telecommunications in Switzerland
Switzerland boasts a highly developed telecommunications infrastructure, characterized by an advanced mobile and landline network. The country is served by several major mobile network operators, including Swisscom, Sunrise, and Salt, who collectively provide extensive coverage across urban and rural areas. As of 2023, Switzerland has achieved nearly complete 4G coverage, with 5G networks expanding rapidly in major cities and towns. This robust mobile network supports a high rate of smartphone usage, with approximately 90% of the population owning a mobile device.
Landline availability remains significant, particularly in rural regions where mobile signal can be less reliable. The Swiss telecommunications market is competitive, offering a variety of plans tailored for both residents and visitors. Mobile phone usage is pervasive, with many individuals utilizing their devices for both personal and professional communication. The country’s investment in high-speed broadband and mobile internet has positioned Switzerland as one of the leading nations in telecommunications in Europe.
Dialing Switzerland from Abroad
Dialing Switzerland from outside the country requires following a specific format. Start by dialing your country’s international access code, often referred to as the exit code. For example, in the United States, this code is 011. Next, you’ll need to add Switzerland's country code, which is 41.
The format for dialing a Swiss number from abroad is as follows: **[Exit Code] + 41 + [Area Code without the leading 0] + [Local Number]**. Area codes in Switzerland typically consist of 1 to 2 digits, such as 44 for Zurich or 31 for Bern. If you are calling a mobile number, you should omit the leading zero, which is standard for domestic calls. For instance, a mobile number starting with 079 would be dialed as 41 79 [Local Number]. Note that while calling mobile numbers typically incurs higher rates than landlines, both types of calls follow the same dialing pattern.
Best Times to Call Switzerland from Melbourne
Switzerland operates on Central European Time (CET), which is UTC+1, and Central European Summer Time (CEST), which is UTC+2 during daylight saving time (from the last Sunday in March to the last Sunday in October). When planning to call, it’s important to consider the typical daily schedules of Swiss residents. Most businesses operate from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM, with a lunch break around noon.
In general, people are most likely to be available for calls during late mornings and early afternoons. Avoid calling during early mornings or late evenings, as these times can often be reserved for personal activities. Additionally, be mindful of national holidays, such as Swiss National Day (August 1) and Federal Day of Thanksgiving (the third Sunday in September), as many businesses will be closed. Weekends are generally family-oriented, so personal calls during these times may be better received.
Calling Etiquette in Switzerland
Switzerland’s communication culture is characterized by formality and respect for privacy. When answering the phone, individuals often greet with a polite “Hallo” or “Grüezi” (the latter in German-speaking areas), followed by their name. Greetings are typically formal in business contexts, with “Herr” or “Frau” preceding the surname being common.
Cold calling is generally less accepted, especially in professional settings, where prior arrangements or introductions are preferred. Personal calls can be more informal, but it's advisable to maintain a respectful tone. In business, the Swiss value directness and efficiency; therefore, calls should be concise and to the point. It’s also common to confirm the purpose of the call upfront. Preferred communication channels may vary by individual, but email is often favored for initial contact, especially in professional settings.
Reading Switzerland Phone Numbers
Switzerland's numbering plan is clean once you know the logic. Mobile numbers begin with 075, 076, 077, 078, or 079 — that 07x opening tells you immediately you're calling a cell. Geographic landlines carry two-digit area codes: 044 for Zürich, 022 for Geneva, 031 for Bern, 061 for Basel. The linguistic divide matters more here than in most countries: Zürich and Bern are German-speaking, Geneva is French, Lugano is Italian. A caller who can open in the right language — even just a sentence before switching to English — will be received noticeably better. Swiss landlines are still widely used in homes and offices; the country didn't abandon the fixed line the way some markets did, and many households have both a Swisscom cable number and a mobile. For professional contacts, the landline at the office is often the more reliable daytime reach.
Smarter International Calling in Melbourne
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 — the corridors that matter most to large chunks of Melbourne's population — 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.
Keeping Melbourne–Switzerland Call Costs Down
Switzerland follows Central European Time with summer daylight saving, which means the offset from North America swings between six and nine hours depending on the season and whether US clocks have shifted yet. Landlines in Switzerland are meaningfully cheaper to call from abroad than Swiss mobiles, and since office landlines remain standard, using a company's direct-dial number rather than someone's cell saves real per-minute cost on long calls. August is a partial echo of France — many Swiss take summer vacation, particularly in the German-speaking cantons — but the effect is less total. Swiss National Day on August 1 is an exception when almost everything closes. The Christmas and New Year window (roughly December 24 through January 2) sees broad office closures. Outside those blackout periods, Swiss contacts are reliable about returning calls the same business day.
Who Calls Switzerland from Melbourne?
Families & Friends
People in Melbourne staying connected with loved ones in Switzerland. Regular calls to check in, celebrate milestones, and maintain bonds across borders.
Business Professionals
Melbourne-based businesses with clients, suppliers, or partners in Switzerland. Professional calls at a fraction of traditional international rates.
Expat Communities
Switzerland 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 Switzerland, or students maintaining connections while studying abroad in Australia.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I call Switzerland from Melbourne?▼
From a regular phone in Melbourne, dial 0011 (the Australia exit code), then CH, then the local number without its leading zero — for example 0011 41781234567. With DialAnyone, just open your browser, enter the number as +41781234567, and click call — the international routing is handled automatically. Rates start at $0.00/min.
What is the cheapest way to call Switzerland from Melbourne?▼
DialAnyone offers the cheapest calls from Melbourne to Switzerland starting at $0.00/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 — just pay-as-you-go credits.
Can I call mobile phones in Switzerland from Melbourne?▼
Yes! DialAnyone lets you call both mobile and landline numbers in Switzerland directly from Melbourne. Mobile rates to Switzerland start at $0.00/min and landline rates from $0.00/min. The recipient doesn't need any app — their phone rings normally.
What time should I call Switzerland from Melbourne?▼
Switzerland is 8 hours behind Melbourne. To reach people during waking hours there (9 AM to 9 PM), call between 5:00 PM and 11:00 PM Melbourne time — that's 9:00 AM and 3:00 PM in Switzerland. DialAnyone works 24/7, so you can call whenever convenient.
Do I need an app to call Switzerland from Melbourne?▼
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 Switzerland. Works on any device — phone, tablet, or computer — as long as you have an internet connection.
Is the call quality good when calling Switzerland from Melbourne?▼
Yes. DialAnyone uses HD VoIP technology (WebRTC) to deliver crystal-clear calls from Melbourne to Switzerland. Melbourne's modern internet infrastructure ensures excellent call quality. The audio quality is typically better than traditional phone calls.
Call Switzerland from Melbourne Today
Start calling Switzerland for just $0.00/min. No app, no contracts, no hassle.