TwinPhoneTwinPhone
Back to BlogGuides

How to Call Australia from the US — Best Methods 2026

Apr 14, 20269 min read

Call Australia from the US for $0.03/min to landlines and $0.04/min to mobiles. per-minute billing, encrypted calls, no contracts or apps.

What It Actually Costs to Call Australia from the US

Australia and the US share close economic and cultural ties. Over 100,000 Americans live in Australia, and roughly 80,000 Australians live in the US. Business between the two countries runs deep — Australia is the 14th largest US trading partner. All of this means a lot of phone calls across the Pacific.

But those calls aren't cheap on traditional carriers. AT&T charges $0.15-0.22/min for calls to Australian numbers depending on your plan. Verizon is similar. T-Mobile includes Australia in some of its international packages, but you're still paying a monthly add-on fee for reduced (not eliminated) per-minute charges.

The underlying cost structure is more reasonable than you'd expect. Australia has well-developed telecom infrastructure with strong competition between Telstra, Optus, and Vodafone. Termination fees are regulated by the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) and are lower than in many other countries. This means VoIP providers can offer genuinely cheap rates.

On TwinPhone, calls to Australian landlines cost $0.03/min and mobile phones cost $0.04/min, billed per minute. A 20-minute call to a Sydney landline costs $0.60. The same call on AT&T would run $3.00-4.40 depending on your plan. Over a year of weekly calls, that's $31.20 vs $156-228.

The mobile rate is only slightly higher than landline because Australia's mobile termination rates are among the lowest in the developed world. In many countries, the gap between landline and mobile rates is much wider.

One more thing: Australia's time zone difference from the US is extreme — 14 to 19 hours ahead depending on the Australian state and US time zone. This makes calling windows narrow, which means when you do call, you want it to be cheap and reliable, not a dropped call that wastes your limited overlap time.

5 Methods to Call Australia from the US

Here's an honest breakdown of every major option available in 2026.

**1. TwinPhone (Browser-Based VoIP)**

TwinPhone connects calls to Australian landlines at $0.03/min and mobiles at $0.04/min with per-minute billing. No app to install — it runs in Chrome, Edge, Brave, or Safari. Every call is encrypted with TLS + SRTP, and adaptive audio technology adjusts to your internet connection in real time.

per-minute billing matters more than people realize. A 2-minute, 15-second call costs exactly that — not 3 minutes. Over dozens of calls, the savings from accurate billing add up.

Sign-up takes 30 seconds and your first call is free. Pay-as-you-go credit ($5, $10, or $25) with no expiration.

Best for: anyone who calls Australian landlines or mobiles regularly and wants the lowest cost without subscriptions.

**2. WhatsApp / FaceTime Audio (App-to-App)**

If the person in Australia uses WhatsApp or has an iPhone (FaceTime), you can call for free over the internet. Australia has high smartphone penetration (over 90%), so this works often.

The limitation: you cannot call Australian phone numbers through these apps. No landlines, no mobiles that aren't on the same app. If you're calling an Australian business, a hotel, a hospital, or an older relative with a landline — app-to-app doesn't work.

Best for: calling friends and family who are reliably on the same messaging app.

**3. Vonage (Traditional VoIP)**

Vonage has offered VoIP service for over two decades. Plans start at $13.99/month and include some international calling, with Australia rates around $0.04-0.06/min depending on your plan tier.

Vonage is reliable but it's built around monthly subscriptions. If you call Australia a few times a month, you're paying the subscription fee even during months when you don't call. The per-minute rate is also higher than TwinPhone for the same destination.

Best for: people who already have Vonage for other reasons and want to add Australian calling.

**4. US Carrier International Plans**

AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile each handle Australia differently:

- AT&T: $0.15-0.22/min without add-on, or $10/day International Day Pass for unlimited calls - Verizon: Similar per-minute rates, international plan from $10/month - T-Mobile: Included in some Magenta plans at reduced rates, or $15/month Stateside International add-on

The per-day and per-month fees are hard to justify unless you're calling Australia daily. And the per-minute rates without an add-on are 4-7x what VoIP costs.

Best for: one-off calls where setting up a VoIP service isn't worth the effort.

**5. Calling Cards**

Prepaid calling cards to Australia still exist but are a dying product. Advertised rates of $0.01-0.03/min look attractive until you factor in connection fees ($0.49-0.99 per call), maintenance charges, and rounding. The effective rate often ends up at $0.08-0.15/min.

Call quality is also a gamble. Premium routes sound fine; cheap routes can have noticeable delay and echo.

Best for: calling from a phone without internet access.

Australia Calling Methods: Cost Comparison Table

| Method | Landline Rate | Mobile Rate | Billing | Monthly Fee | Encryption | Setup | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | TwinPhone | $0.03/min | $0.04/min | per minute | None | TLS + SRTP | 30 seconds, browser | | WhatsApp/FaceTime | Free (app-to-app) | Free (app-to-app) | N/A | None | End-to-end | App install | | Vonage | $0.04/min | $0.06/min | Per minute | $13.99+/mo | Standard | Account + plan | | AT&T | $0.15/min | $0.22/min | Per minute | $0-10/day add-on | Standard | Existing plan | | Calling Cards | $0.01-0.03/min* | $0.03-0.06/min* | Per minute (rounded) | Maintenance fees | None | Buy card |

*Calling card rates before connection fees and maintenance charges. Effective cost is significantly higher.

TwinPhone's combination of low per-minute rates, per-minute billing, and zero monthly fees makes it the cheapest way to call Australian phone numbers. The only cheaper option is app-to-app calling, which doesn't reach actual phone numbers.

How to Dial Australia: Country Code, Area Codes, and Number Format

Australian phone numbers follow a consistent format, but there are a few things to get right.

**Country code:** +61

**How to dial from the US:**

Step 1: Dial the exit code (011 from a US phone, or just + from a VoIP service like TwinPhone).

Step 2: Dial 61 (Australia's country code).

Step 3: Dial the local number without the leading 0.

Just like Nigeria and most other countries, Australian local numbers start with 0 when dialed domestically. You drop that 0 when calling from outside Australia.

**Examples:**

- Sydney landline (02) 9876-5432 becomes: +61-2-9876-5432 - Melbourne landline (03) 9123-4567 becomes: +61-3-9123-4567 - Mobile 0412-345-678 becomes: +61-412-345-678 - Perth landline (08) 9234-5678 becomes: +61-8-9234-5678

**Australian area codes (landlines):** - Sydney, New South Wales: 02 - Melbourne, Victoria, Tasmania: 03 - Brisbane, Queensland: 07 - Perth, Western Australia, South Australia, Northern Territory: 08

Australian landline numbers are 8 digits after the area code (10 digits total including area code). Mobile numbers are also 10 digits starting with 04.

**Australian mobile numbers:**

All Australian mobile numbers start with 04XX. If the number starts with 04 domestically (or +61 4XX internationally), it's a mobile phone. There's no need to identify the carrier from the prefix — Australian mobile number portability means the prefix no longer reliably indicates the carrier.

**Time zones — this is where it gets complicated:**

Australia spans three main time zones:

- **AEST (Australian Eastern Standard Time):** GMT+10. Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Canberra, Hobart. During Australian daylight saving (October-April): AEDT = GMT+11. - **ACST (Australian Central Standard Time):** GMT+9:30. Adelaide, Darwin. During daylight saving: ACDT = GMT+10:30. Yes, the half-hour offset is real. - **AWST (Australian Western Standard Time):** GMT+8. Perth. No daylight saving.

Australia is 14-19 hours ahead of the US depending on which Australian state and which US time zone:

- Sydney is 16 hours ahead of New York (EST) or 15 hours ahead during US daylight saving - Sydney is 19 hours ahead of Los Angeles (PST) or 17 hours ahead when both observe daylight saving - Perth is 13 hours ahead of New York (EST)

**Practical calling windows:**

The time difference is the biggest challenge. Here are workable windows:

- From US East Coast (EST): 5:00 AM - 8:00 AM EST = 9:00 PM - 12:00 AM in Sydney (same day) - From US East Coast: 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM EST = 9:00 AM - 11:00 AM in Sydney (next day) - From US West Coast (PST): 2:00 PM - 5:00 PM PST = 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM in Sydney (next day)

Evening calls from the US East Coast line up with Australian mornings. Early morning US calls line up with Australian evenings. Plan ahead — the overlap is tight.

Tips for Clear Calls to Australia

Australia's telecom infrastructure is excellent, so call quality is generally high. The main challenge is the sheer distance — your voice is traveling roughly 10,000 miles. Here's how to maximize quality.

**Prioritize Wi-Fi over cellular.** VoIP calls to Australia cross the Pacific through undersea fiber cables. A stable Wi-Fi connection on your end ensures the audio stream stays consistent. Cellular data works but is more prone to jitter, especially if you're moving.

**Use a wired connection if possible.** If you're at a desktop, an Ethernet cable to your router eliminates Wi-Fi variability entirely. This is the gold standard for international VoIP calls.

**Close bandwidth-heavy applications.** Streaming video, large downloads, and cloud backups compete with your voice call for bandwidth. Pause them during important calls.

**Use headphones or earbuds.** A dedicated microphone close to your mouth produces cleaner audio than a laptop mic across the room. This is especially important for long-distance calls where the codec is already compressing aggressively.

**TwinPhone's adaptive audio handles variable conditions.** The adaptive audio engine continuously monitors your connection and adjusts the codec in real time. If your bandwidth dips, the audio quality adjusts smoothly rather than cutting out. This is one of the advantages of a purpose-built calling platform over general-purpose apps.

**Verify the number format before calling.** The most common error: including the leading 0 after the country code. +61-02-9876-5432 is wrong. +61-2-9876-5432 is correct. If you hear an Australian recorded message saying the number is not valid, check whether you accidentally included the 0.

**Consider the time of day in Australia.** Australian business hours (9 AM - 5 PM AEST) are peak network times. For the very best call quality, try calling during Australian off-peak hours — early morning or late evening Australian time.

How to Get Started with TwinPhone for Australia Calls

Here's how to make your first call to Australia in under two minutes.

1. Open any modern browser — Chrome, Edge, Brave, or Safari. Navigate to TwinPhone.com.

2. Create an account with your email or Google sign-in. No credit card needed upfront.

3. Make your free test call to check audio quality on your connection.

4. Add pay-as-you-go credit: $5, $10, or $25. No subscription, no monthly fees, and your credit never expires.

5. Dial the Australian number in international format. Drop the leading 0: - Sydney landline (02) 9876-5432 → dial +61-2-9876-5432 - Mobile 0412-345-678 → dial +61-412-345-678

6. Talk for as long as you need. per-minute billing means a 4-minute, 10-second call to an Australian landline costs $0.13 — not $0.15 (the rounded-up 5-minute charge you'd get elsewhere).

All calls are encrypted end-to-end with TLS + SRTP. Your conversation is private whether you're calling from home, a coffee shop, or an airport lounge.

With $5 in credit, you get over 166 minutes to Australian landlines or 125 minutes to Australian mobiles. That's a lot of conversation with family, colleagues, or business contacts for the price of a coffee.

TwinPhone works from anywhere with internet access. No SIM cards, no hardware, no VPN, no special configuration. If your browser can load a webpage, you can call Australia.

Ready to try it yourself?

Make your first international call free. No credit card, no app download — just open your browser.

Try Now

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about international calling.

With TwinPhone, Australian landlines cost $0.03/min and mobile phones cost $0.04/min with per-minute billing. US carriers like AT&T charge $0.15-0.22/min. A 20-minute call to a Sydney landline costs $0.60 on TwinPhone vs $3.00-4.40 on AT&T.

Australia's country code is +61. To call from the US, dial +61 followed by the local number without the leading 0. A Sydney number (02) 9876-5432 becomes +61-2-9876-5432.

Australia is 14-19 hours ahead of the US. From the East Coast, 5:00-8:00 AM EST reaches Australia at 9:00 PM-12:00 AM, and 5:00-7:00 PM EST reaches them at 9:00-11:00 AM the next day. From the West Coast, 2:00-5:00 PM PST is 9:00 AM-12:00 PM in Sydney.

Yes. TwinPhone runs in your browser and connects to real Australian phone numbers, both landlines and mobiles on all carriers including Telstra, Optus, and Vodafone. No app download needed.

These are Australia's three time zones. AEST (GMT+10) covers Sydney and Melbourne. ACST (GMT+9:30) covers Adelaide and Darwin. AWST (GMT+8) covers Perth. Eastern states also observe daylight saving from October to April, adding one hour.

Yes. Every TwinPhone call uses TLS + SRTP encryption, the same standard used by financial institutions. Your calls are private even on unsecured public Wi-Fi networks.

Stop overpaying for international calls

From $0.02/min. Encrypted. Works on any connection. Start from just $0.50.