Receive SMS Online with a Iraq Phone Number
Get a private Iraq number (+IQ) and receive texts and verification codes from anywhere — no SIM required.
A Iraq virtual number from DialAnyone lets you receive text messages online without a local SIM card. The number (+IQ) is private to you, so texts and one-time codes land in your inbox and nobody else's — read them in your browser or on your phone from anywhere in the world.
About Iraq Mobile Numbers
Iraq's communication runs almost entirely on mobile. The three main operators — Zain, Asiacell, and Korek — cover Baghdad, Basra, Erbil, and the major urban corridors, though signal gaps persist in rural and conflict-affected areas. Mobile numbers begin with 07 domestically; internationally that becomes +964 7, with specific prefixes in the 7x range associated with different carriers. Zain numbers commonly run 077x and 078x; Asiacell uses 077x and 075x; Korek is more concentrated in the Kurdistan Region with 075x and 076x. Landlines do exist — Baghdad's area code is 1, Basra is 40 — but they are limited to established institutions and are less likely to be a personal contact's main number. For business calls to hotels, government offices, and larger companies, a fixed line is cheaper to reach and often better staffed. Anyone you know personally almost certainly uses a mobile.
What You Can Receive on a Iraq Number
A Private Iraq Number vs a Free Public One
Searching for a free Iraq number to receive SMS usually leads to public receive-SMS websites. They cost nothing, but they come with real trade-offs that make them unreliable for anything important.
- Private — assigned only to you
- Works for most OTP and verification codes
- Keep the same number as long as you need it
- Two-way: receive and send texts and calls
- Read messages in your browser or on your phone
- Shared by thousands — anyone can read your texts
- Widely blacklisted, so codes often never arrive
- Numbers rotate and vanish without warning
- Receive-only — you can't reply
- No privacy and no support
Note: some services block all internet-based (VoIP) numbers, so we can't guarantee every sender will deliver. For everyday texting and most verification codes, a private Iraq number is far more reliable.
How to Get a Iraq Number for SMS
Timing and Cost Tips for Iraq
Iraq operates on Arabia Standard Time, UTC+3, year-round with no daylight saving adjustment. The working week runs Sunday through Thursday in most public institutions and many businesses, with Friday as the main holy day and Saturday widely treated as a weekend. Calling on a Friday expecting office staff is unlikely to succeed. Business hours typically run from around 8 AM to 3 or 4 PM local time — shorter days than many callers expect, which means the productive calling window from Europe is mid-morning, and from the US East Coast requires an early start. Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha each bring multi-day closures, and the exact dates shift yearly with the lunar calendar. Personal calls to Baghdad or Erbil residents land best in the evening after 6 PM local, when family time and social availability overlap.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I receive SMS with a Iraq number?▼
Can I receive verification codes (OTP) on a Iraq number?▼
Is this better than a free Iraq receive-SMS site?▼
Do I need to be in Iraq to receive SMS?▼
Can I also send SMS and make calls with the number?▼
How much does a Iraq number for SMS cost?▼
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