Make affordable international calls from Rome, Italy to Finland . Rates from $0.00/min with no app required.
Landline Rates
$0.00/min
Mobile Rates
$0.00/min
Dial Code
+FI
Calling Finland from Rome
Rome, with a population of 2.9 million, is a major city in Italy 🇮🇹 with a significant community that maintains connections to Finland . Whether you have family, friends, or business contacts in Finland, making international calls from Rome doesn't have to be expensive.
Traditional phone carriers in Italy charge premium rates for international calls to Finland, often between $1.50 and $3.00 per minute. DialAnyone lets residents of Rome call Finland 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.
Rome's modern telecommunications infrastructure means you'll enjoy crystal-clear HD voice quality on every call to Finland. DialAnyone uses WebRTC technology, the same standard used by major tech companies for voice and video calls, ensuring reliable connections.
The View from Rome
Rome is the city where Italy's international calling map gets most complicated. A population of 2,872,800 includes an enormous immigrant workforce — Romanians concentrated in Pigneto and Tor Bella Monaca, Bangladeshis and Filipinos in Esquilino, Latin Americans in Prati — plus foreign diplomats, students on Erasmus and three-year postings, and Vatican-adjacent clergy with ties everywhere from West Africa to the Philippines. Each group has its own corridor, its own frequency, its own tolerance for per-minute costs.
Italian carriers — TIM, Vodafone, Wind Tre and Iliad — offer bundle packages with international calling top-ups, but the pricing logic rarely rewards high-frequency callers to developing-world mobile networks. A TIM standard plan might include Germany or France in a bundle and price Bangladesh or Romania mobile numbers separately. Iliad's aggressive pricing shook up the domestic market after its 2018 entry, but international add-ons remain a margin line for all four. The Esquilino market, the city's densest immigrant commercial hub, still sells top-up cards and international-calling SIM slots to people who don't trust the carrier bundles to behave consistently.
Rome's Global Connections
Romanians form Rome's largest foreign-born community, one of the biggest Romanian populations outside Romania itself, concentrated in peripheral quartieri and sustained by a Rome-Bucharest corridor that predates the economic migration waves of the 2000s but intensified dramatically after Romanian EU accession. The Filipino community, many of whose members arrived through domestic and care-worker channels, sustains a high-volume Manila link despite the time difference. Bangladeshis — particularly prominent in Esquilino — keep a dense Dhaka and Chittagong corridor active. Latin American populations, Peruvian and Ecuadorian in particular, have long been established in central Rome. Italy's role as an African migration gateway means West African communities, especially from Nigeria, Senegal and Ghana, add further destinations.
Time Difference: Rome to Finland
Finland is 1 hour ahead of Rome.
Time in Rome
Time in Finland
8:00 AM
9:00 AM
12:00 PM
1:00 PM
5:00 PM
6:00 PM
9:00 PM
10:00 PM
To catch people during waking hours in Finland (9 AM to 9 PM), call between 8:00 AM and 8:00 PM Rome time — that lands between 9:00 AM and 9:00 PM local time in Finland.
How to Call Finland from Rome
1
Open DialAnyone in Your Browser
From Rome, 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 Finland Number
Type the Finland phone number with country code +FI. DialAnyone will auto-format it for you.
4
Click Call
That's it! Your call connects instantly from Rome to Finland in HD quality.
Dialing Finland from Rome: Number Format
When calling Finland from Rome using a traditional phone, you need the international dialing prefix followed by the Finland country code (+FI). The format is:
IDD + FI + local number
The international dialing prefix (IDD) from Italy is "00" (or "+" from mobile phones). A complete dialed number looks like 00 358412345678. With DialAnyone, you can skip the IDD entirely — just enter the Finland number in the format +358412345678 and DialAnyone handles the routing.
Rome to Finland: Rate Comparison
Calling Method
Rate to Finland
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 Rome Residents Choose DialAnyone for Finland
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Call any phone number in Finland — landline or mobile — directly from Rome
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Rates from Rome to Finland start at just $0.00/min
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No app download required — call from any browser in Rome
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Save up to 90% compared to Italy carrier international rates
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HD voice quality using WebRTC technology over Rome's internet
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Credits never expire — buy once, use whenever you need to call Finland
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Works on any device: phone, tablet, laptop, or desktop computer
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Send SMS to Finland from Rome at low rates too
Telecommunications in Finland
Finland boasts a highly developed telecommunications infrastructure, characterized by a robust network of mobile and landline services. The country has a competitive market with major mobile network operators including Telia Finland, Elisa, and DNA, all of which offer extensive 4G and emerging 5G networks. As of 2023, nearly 99% of the population has access to 4G, and 5G coverage is rapidly expanding, particularly in urban areas like Helsinki, Tampere, and Oulu.
The Finnish government has actively promoted digital inclusion, resulting in high mobile phone penetration rates, with approximately 95% of Finns owning a smartphone. Landline services are still available but are increasingly less common as mobile phones become the primary means of communication. Overall, Finland's telecommunications landscape is marked by reliability, advanced technology, and a commitment to ensuring connectivity across the country, even in remote areas.
Dialing Finland from Abroad
Dialing Finland from abroad requires following a specific format. Firstly, you need to dial the international access code for your country (for example, 011 in the USA, 00 in the UK). Next, enter Finland's country code, which is +358. After that, you will need to dial the area code, which can vary depending on the location you are trying to reach. For example, Helsinki's area code is 9, while Tampere's is 3.
When calling a mobile number, you typically omit the leading zero. For instance, if the mobile number is 0400 123456, you would dial +358 400 123456 from abroad. Landline numbers, however, require the area code with the leading zero omitted, making it +358 9 for Helsinki landlines. Be aware that calls to mobile numbers may incur different rates compared to landline calls, depending on your carrier and the type of plan you have.
Best Times to Call Finland from Rome
Finland operates on Eastern European Time (EET), which is UTC+2, and shifts to Eastern European Summer Time (EEST), UTC+3, during daylight saving time from the last Sunday in March to the last Sunday in October. Typical business hours are from 9 AM to 5 PM, Monday to Friday, making these times ideal for professional calls.
However, personal calls can be made at various times throughout the day, though evenings are preferable for catching friends or family at home. Weekends tend to be quieter, as many Finns partake in outdoor activities or family gatherings. It’s also important to be mindful of national holidays, such as Independence Day on December 6, Vappu (May Day) on May 1, and Midsummer, which can affect availability. Planning your calls around these factors will help ensure you reach your contacts at a suitable time.
Calling Etiquette in Finland
Finnish communication culture is characterized by a direct and straightforward approach. When answering a phone call, people typically greet with a simple "Hello" or "Hei," regardless of the formality of the conversation. The use of first names is common, even in business contexts, reflecting the informal nature of interactions in Finland. Cold calling is generally accepted, but it is often more effective to establish initial contact through email or social media, especially in professional settings.
In business, it is important to be concise and clear, as Finns value efficiency in communication. Personal calls may involve casual greetings and small talk, but business conversations usually focus directly on the matter at hand. Silence during conversations is not awkward; it is often seen as a sign of thoughtfulness. Understanding these nuances can greatly enhance the effectiveness of your communication within Finland.
Reading Finland Phone Numbers
Finland's mobile numbers all begin with 04 or 05 after the country code — so +358 4x or +358 5x — and these are the numbers Finns actually keep and answer. Geographic landlines carry area codes starting with a single digit: Helsinki and the capital region are 9, Tampere is 3, Turku is 2, Oulu is 8. The landline is alive in Finnish offices and some homes, but younger Finns often have no fixed line at all. There's one number range to approach carefully: numbers beginning with 06 or 10 can be service lines priced above the standard rate, and some won't accept international calls. Businesses sometimes publish both a geographic number and a service-line number; always choose the geographic one from abroad. Finnish number portability means a familiar geographic prefix on a cell can be misleading — the number type matters, not the area code.
Smarter International Calling in Rome
Rome's immigrant calling culture developed in the calling-card era, and the corner shops near Termini and Piazza Vittorio still stock racks of them. The cards work, but they carry the familiar tax: access numbers, connection fees, rates that look cheaper per minute than they are per useful conversation. Italian carrier international bundles replaced some of that for people who call one country — usually a European one — reliably each month. For the Romanian cleaner who alternates between calls to Bucharest and visits from a sibling in Germany, or the Filipino caregiver splitting calls between Manila and a relative in London, no single bundle covers the whole map cheaply. Internet-based calling routes each destination at its own transparent per-minute rate, costs only what the call costs, and skips the access number entirely.
Keeping Rome–Finland Call Costs Down
Geographic landlines (09 for Helsinki, 03 for Tampere, and so on) cost less to reach than Finnish mobiles, and Finnish companies keep those numbers staffed. For regular calls to the same business, worth saving the landline specifically. Finland observes a number of meaningful quiet periods: the Midsummer weekend in late June empties offices and much of Helsinki, with people at their summer cottages and genuinely off the grid. The Christmas–New Year stretch from December 23 through January 2 is similarly hollow for business. EET/EEST (UTC+2/+3) puts Finnish business hours conveniently close for callers in Europe; from the US East Coast the seven-to-eight hour gap means dialing first thing in the morning catches Helsinki before lunch. Finns tend not to answer calls from unknown international numbers, so a brief text or email beforehand dramatically improves pick-up rates.
Who Calls Finland from Rome?
Families & Friends
People in Rome staying connected with loved ones in Finland. Regular calls to check in, celebrate milestones, and maintain bonds across borders.
Business Professionals
Rome-based businesses with clients, suppliers, or partners in Finland. Professional calls at a fraction of traditional international rates.
Expat Communities
Finland expats living in Rome who need to call home regularly for family matters, legal issues, or staying in touch with their roots.
Travelers & Students
People in Rome planning trips to Finland, or students maintaining connections while studying abroad in Italy.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I call Finland from Rome?▼
From a regular phone in Rome, dial 00 (the Italy exit code), then FI, then the local number without its leading zero — for example 00 358412345678. With DialAnyone, just open your browser, enter the number as +358412345678, and click call — the international routing is handled automatically. Rates start at $0.00/min.
What is the cheapest way to call Finland from Rome?▼
DialAnyone offers the cheapest calls from Rome to Finland starting at $0.00/min. Traditional carriers from Italy 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 Finland from Rome?▼
Yes! DialAnyone lets you call both mobile and landline numbers in Finland directly from Rome. Mobile rates to Finland 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 Finland from Rome?▼
Finland is 1 hour ahead of Rome. To reach people during waking hours there (9 AM to 9 PM), call between 8:00 AM and 8:00 PM Rome time — that's 9:00 AM and 9:00 PM in Finland. DialAnyone works 24/7, so you can call whenever convenient.
Do I need an app to call Finland from Rome?▼
No app needed. DialAnyone works directly in your web browser from Rome or anywhere in Italy. Just go to dialanyone.com, log in, and start calling Finland. Works on any device — phone, tablet, or computer — as long as you have an internet connection.
Is the call quality good when calling Finland from Rome?▼
Yes. DialAnyone uses HD VoIP technology (WebRTC) to deliver crystal-clear calls from Rome to Finland. Rome's modern internet infrastructure ensures excellent call quality. The audio quality is typically better than traditional phone calls.
Call Finland from Rome Today
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