Oceania Country Codes & International Dialing Guide
Explore country codes across Oceania — including Australia, New Zealand, Melanesia, Micronesia and Polynesia — with their international calling prefixes, ISO 2/3 codes and primary time zones. Use the smart filters below to quickly find the correct code before placing international calls across the Pacific.
| Country / Territory | Sub-region | Calling Code | ISO 2 | ISO 3 | Main Time Zone |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| American Samoa | Polynesia (US territory) | +1-684 | AS | ASM | UTC−11 |
| Australia | Australasia | +61 | AU | AUS | UTC+8 to UTC+11 |
| Christmas Island | Australian external territory (Indian Ocean) | +61 | CX | CXR | UTC+7 |
| Cocos (Keeling) Islands | Australian external territory (Indian Ocean) | +61 | CC | CCK | UTC+6:30 |
| Cook Islands | Polynesia (self-governing, free association with New Zealand) | +682 | CK | COK | UTC−10 |
| Fiji | Melanesia | +679 | FJ | FJI | UTC+12 |
| French Polynesia | Polynesia (French overseas collectivity) | +689 | PF | PYF | UTC−10 to UTC−9 |
| Guam | Micronesia (US territory) | +1-671 | GU | GUM | UTC+10 |
| Kiribati | Micronesia & Polynesia (Line & Gilbert Islands) | +686 | KI | KIR | UTC+12 to UTC+14 |
| Marshall Islands | Micronesia | +692 | MH | MHL | UTC+12 |
| Micronesia (Federated States of) | Micronesia | +691 | FM | FSM | UTC+10 / UTC+11 |
| Nauru | Micronesia | +674 | NR | NRU | UTC+12 |
| New Caledonia | Melanesia (French special collectivity) | +687 | NC | NCL | UTC+11 |
| New Zealand | Australasia | +64 | NZ | NZL | UTC+12 / UTC+13 |
| Niue | Polynesia (self-governing, free association with New Zealand) | +683 | NU | NIU | UTC−11 |
| Norfolk Island | Australasia (Australian external territory) | +672 | NF | NFK | UTC+11 |
| Northern Mariana Islands | Micronesia (US territory) | +1-670 | MP | MNP | UTC+10 |
| Palau | Micronesia | +680 | PW | PLW | UTC+9 |
| Papua New Guinea | Melanesia | +675 | PG | PNG | UTC+10 |
| Pitcairn Islands | Remote Polynesia (British territory) | +64 | PN | PCN | UTC−8 |
| Samoa | Polynesia | +685 | WS | WSM | UTC+13 |
| Solomon Islands | Melanesia | +677 | SB | SLB | UTC+11 |
| Tokelau | Polynesia (New Zealand territory) | +690 | TK | TKL | UTC+13 |
| Tonga | Polynesia | +676 | TO | TON | UTC+13 |
| Tuvalu | Polynesia | +688 | TV | TUV | UTC+12 |
| Vanuatu | Melanesia | +678 | VU | VUT | UTC+11 |
| Wallis and Futuna | Polynesia (French territory) | +681 | WF | WLF | UTC+12 |
Oceania region overview
Oceania is a vast maritime region stretching across the Pacific Ocean, from Australia and New Zealand to thousands of island communities in Melanesia, Micronesia and Polynesia. The region includes highly developed telecom markets such as Australia and New Zealand, alongside smaller island states and remote territories where satellite links still play an important role.
Unlike regions with shared numbering plans, most Oceania destinations have their own unique country calling codes – for example +61 for Australia, +64 for New Zealand, +679 for Fiji and +685 for Samoa. A few territories share codes with larger neighbours (such as some Australian external territories using +61 or islands that use +1 within the North American Numbering Plan).
For call centers, roaming partners and global businesses, having a clean reference of Oceania country codes, ISO codes and time zones reduces failed calls, improves customer experience and helps schedule communication during local business hours in the Pacific.
Oceania sub-regions for telecom & routing
When designing routing tables, SMS campaigns or support coverage, it can be useful to group Oceania into a few practical sub-regions based on geography, population and language.
Australasia
Australia · New Zealand · Norfolk IslandAustralasia concentrates a large share of the region’s population and international traffic. Networks are modern, with extensive mobile coverage, high smartphone penetration and strong demand for enterprise services, cloud communication and unified collaboration tools.
Time zones range roughly from UTC+8 in western Australia to UTC+13 in New Zealand during daylight saving. Many global organizations run regional hubs out of Sydney, Melbourne or Auckland.
Melanesia
Papua New Guinea · Fiji · Solomon Islands · Vanuatu · New CaledoniaMelanesia covers the large islands north and northeast of Australia. These markets have a mix of urban and very remote communities, with telecoms supporting mining, agriculture, tourism and development projects. Satellite backhaul, undersea cables and microwave links are all used to reach dispersed populations.
Most Melanesian destinations sit between UTC+10 and UTC+12, simplifying regional coverage from Australia or East Asia.
Micronesia
FSM · Palau · Guam · Nauru · Marshall Islands · N. Marianas · Kiribati (part)Micronesia consists of hundreds of small islands spread across the western Pacific. Many states and territories have strong ties to the United States or regional partners, and rely on a combination of submarine cables and satellite systems to maintain connectivity for government, tourism and diaspora communities.
Common time zones are UTC+9, UTC+10, UTC+11 and UTC+12. Calling costs and roaming arrangements can vary significantly between islands, so enterprises often treat Micronesia as a distinct cluster.
Polynesia & remote territories
Samoa · Tonga · Cook Islands · Niue · Tokelau · French Polynesia · Pitcairn · Wallis & Futuna · American SamoaPolynesia stretches across the central and eastern Pacific, including island states and associated territories. Populations are relatively small, but outbound and inbound calling is important for tourism, maritime traffic and overseas communities in New Zealand, Australia and North America.
Time zones here span from UTC−11 to UTC+13/+14, crossing the International Date Line. For global campaigns, you may need separate schedules for “east-of-date-line” and “west-of-date-line” destinations.
Time zones across Oceania
Oceania spans some of the earliest and latest time zones on earth. Some islands share similar local times with East Asia and Australia, while others are a full calendar day ahead of Europe and the Americas.
Representative Oceania time zones
| Zone | UTC offset | Example destinations | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| UTC−11 / UTC−10 | UTC−11 to UTC−10 | American Samoa, Niue, Cook Islands, parts of French Polynesia | Among the last places on earth to reach a new day; suitable for “end-of-day” outreach. |
| UTC+10 to UTC+12 | UTC+10 to UTC+12 | Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Fiji, Nauru, Marshall Islands | Aligns closely with eastern Australia and parts of East Asia. |
| Australasia | UTC+8 to UTC+13 | Australia (multiple zones) · New Zealand · Norfolk Island | Daylight saving can shift the offset by one hour in parts of Australia and New Zealand. |
| UTC+13 / UTC+14 | UTC+13 to UTC+14 | Samoa, Tonga, Kiribati (Line Islands), Tokelau (seasonal) | These islands often enter a new calendar day before most of the world – useful for “day-one” launches. |
For precise planning, always verify local time and daylight saving rules for each destination, especially around the International Date Line.
Suggested calling windows into Oceania
Because Oceania spans such a wide time range, it’s useful to define clear windows by cluster instead of “one-size-fits-all” Pacific calling hours.
- From Europe: Early morning in central Europe (06:00–09:00 CET/CEST) overlaps with afternoon in Australia and early evening in New Zealand. For Polynesia and the eastern Pacific, late afternoon in Europe may work better.
- From North America: West Coast teams can often reach Australia and New Zealand in their morning by calling in the late afternoon or early evening the previous day. East Coast teams should use early evening slots.
- Within Asia-Pacific: Businesses in Singapore, Hong Kong or Japan enjoy relatively convenient overlap with Australasia and much of Melanesia/Micronesia using mid-morning to mid-afternoon local time.
- Islands near the Date Line: For Samoa, Tonga and Kiribati’s eastern islands, double-check the date as well as the time – these destinations can be a full calendar day ahead of the caller.
Dialing patterns & example calls into Oceania
Most Oceania countries follow the standard international dialing structure, but number lengths and mobile prefixes differ between islands. The generic pattern is:
Generic dialing format
Example: calling a landline in Sydney (Australia) from France: 00 61 2 xxxx xxxx – where 00 is France’s exit code, 61 is Australia’s country code and 2 is the area code for New South Wales.
Mobile vs landline numbers
In many Oceania markets, mobile numbers start with dedicated prefixes (for example “4” in Australian mobiles or “2/21/22” in some New Zealand mobile ranges). In smaller island states, mobiles and fixed lines may share similar lengths but different initial digits. Always follow the latest numbering guidance from local carriers or the national regulator.
United Kingdom → New Zealand (mobile)
00 64 2x xxx xxxx
00 (UK exit code) + 64 (New Zealand) + mobile prefix (2x) + subscriber number. Exact patterns depend on mobile operator allocations.
United States → Fiji (landline)
011 679 xx xxxx
011 (US exit code) + 679 (Fiji) + local 6- or 7-digit fixed-line number. Some operators may require an additional digit pattern depending on the region of Fiji.
Singapore → Samoa (mobile)
001 685 xx xxxx
001 (example Singapore exit code) + 685 (Samoa) + local mobile number. Check with your carrier whether to use 001, 008 or the “+” symbol for international access.
FAQ: Calling Oceania countries & territories
Is there a single country code for all of Oceania? +
No. Each country and most territories in Oceania have their own country code, such as +61 for Australia, +64 for New Zealand, +679 for Fiji and +685 for Samoa. Some territories share numbering plans or codes with a larger state (for example, certain US or Australian territories).
Why do some Pacific islands use +1 while others use different codes? +
Islands such as Guam, American Samoa and the Northern Mariana Islands are part of the North American Numbering Plan and therefore use the shared country code +1 with their own area codes. Independent states like Fiji, Samoa or Tonga have unique country codes assigned by the ITU to reflect their sovereignty and distinct numbering plans.
How should I store Oceania phone numbers in my CRM or address book? +
The best practice is to use full international format for every contact: start with “+”, then the country code, then the area or mobile prefix and the subscriber number – for example +61 4xx xxx xxx (Australian mobile) or +679 xx xxxx (Fiji). This ensures correct routing even when users roam or you send messages via multiple carriers.
Are calls to Pacific islands more expensive than calls to Australia and New Zealand? +
Often yes. Smaller island states rely more heavily on satellite or limited-capacity submarine cables, which can make wholesale rates higher than in large markets like Australia and New Zealand. Retail prices depend on your operator’s tariff plans, but it is common for calls to remote territories or very small island nations to be priced in higher rate bands.
Where can I see detailed formats for each Oceania country? +
Every destination in this table has its own detail page on CountryCode.online, including example numbers, emergency services, trunk prefixes, mobile ranges and time zone data. Start from the Countries directory or use the homepage search to navigate directly to pages such as Australia, New Zealand or Fiji.
Need all Oceania country codes in one file?
Export the full Oceania list (country, dialing code, ISO codes) as CSV or Excel and import it to your CRM, dialer or marketing automation platform.