182

I need to determine whether a phone number is valid before attempting to dial it. The phone call can go anywhere in the world.

What regular expression will match valid international phone numbers?

7
  • How does any regex handle errors like out of service numbers? Just try calling and handle invalid-number as you would other errors.
    – Roger Pate
    Jan 21, 2010 at 23:58
  • 6
    While you are correct that the regex cannot determine this, each outbound attempt consumes time and resources. Doing a quick sanity check on the number ensures that an obviously bogus call does not block a valuable channel. Jan 22, 2010 at 0:01
  • 3
    LOL @ paxdiablo.... I guess 1-800-CALL-HELP will pass your RegExp test...lol Jan 22, 2010 at 0:31
  • 3
    Something that is not clear in this question is if the numbers have to be valid if called from the US or from any country in the world, because most of the solutions below do no validate some valid numbers (such as 0030 210 12312312 - a valid Greek number called from any EU country)
    – Xeroxoid
    Aug 11, 2015 at 15:27
  • 2
    @JonHanna I agree to a point, but on the other hand, from the UX perspective don't you think that if a user inputs a 00XX...X number, the test should pass? There are cases where users (i.e. older people) don't even know what the + is and how to type it in on a numeric/phone keypad. Also I could still argue that 00XXX is a valid international number (i.e. in a user's context) where instead of the +, the exit code was used.
    – Xeroxoid
    Aug 13, 2015 at 0:30

25 Answers 25

140
\+(9[976]\d|8[987530]\d|6[987]\d|5[90]\d|42\d|3[875]\d|
2[98654321]\d|9[8543210]|8[6421]|6[6543210]|5[87654321]|
4[987654310]|3[9643210]|2[70]|7|1)\d{1,14}$

Is the correct format for matching a generic international phone number. I replaced the US land line centric international access code 011 with the standard international access code identifier of '+', making it mandatory. I also changed the minimum for the national number to at least one digit.

Note that if you enter numbers in this format into your mobile phone address book, you may successfully call any number in your address book no matter where you travel. For land lines, replace the plus with the international access code for the country you are dialing from.

Note that this DOES NOT take into account national number plan rules - specifically, it allows zeros and ones in locations that national number plans may not allow and also allows number lengths greater than the national number plan for some countries (e.g., the US).

12
  • 7
    Seems sensible to me. I'm going to use this one Sep 6, 2011 at 10:14
  • 34
    This is not valid. European phone numbers can start with a double 0 without a + in the beginning. Thus a phone number such as: +44 8984 1234 (UK) is also perfectly valid if written 0044 8984 1234 which this regexp (and on other answers as well) does not support.
    – Xeroxoid
    Aug 11, 2015 at 15:29
  • 11
    Combined with @fezfox's improvements(?) and length optimized: ^\+((?:9[679]|8[035789]|6[789]|5[90]|42|3[578]|2[1-689])|9[0-58]|8[1246]|6[0-6]|5[1-8]|4[013-9]|3[0-469]|2[70]|7|1)(?:\W*\d){0,13}\d$
    – SamWhan
    Mar 5, 2018 at 11:16
  • 5
    +1. From the UX point of view, yeah it might make sense to allow 00 in front. From development and maintenance point of view, I'd say it's perfectly fine to enforce all numbers to start with + or even replace 00 with a + each time you get it - especially given that most people are aware of the + format (which most international phone input fields require anyway). Plus it's a one-liner fix, and way more readable. This approach would also ensure that all phone numbers are in the same format, and makes your validation much less error-prone, thus making the whole thing more maintainable.
    – milosmns
    Nov 3, 2019 at 12:04
  • 3
    And also, in the "old" days of pre-EDGE (plain GSM) SMS, using 00 would not send the message correctly, whereas starting with a + would always work internationally. We can go crazy and make it super complex, but sometimes it's possible/worth dropping a few constraints to make our lives easier :)
    – milosmns
    Nov 3, 2019 at 12:07
74

All country codes are defined by the ITU. The following regex is based on ITU-T E.164 and Annex to ITU Operational Bulletin No. 930 – 15.IV.2009. It contains all current country codes and codes reserved for future use. While it could be shortened a bit, I decided to include each code independently.

This is for calls originating from the USA. For other countries, replace the international access code (the 011 at the beginning of the regex) with whatever is appropriate for that country's dialing plan.

Also, note that ITU E.164 defines the maximum length of a full international telephone number to 15 digits. This means a three digit country code results in up to 12 additional digits, and a 1 digit country code could contain up to 14 additional digits. Hence the

[0-9]{0,14}$

a the end of the regex.

Most importantly, this regex does not mean the number is valid - each country defines its own internal numbering plan. This only ensures that the country code is valid.

^011(999|998|997|996|995|994|993|992|991| 990|979|978|977|976|975|974|973|972|971|970| 969|968|967|966|965|964|963|962|961|960|899| 898|897|896|895|894|893|892|891|890|889|888| 887|886|885|884|883|882|881|880|879|878|877| 876|875|874|873|872|871|870|859|858|857|856| 855|854|853|852|851|850|839|838|837|836|835| 834|833|832|831|830|809|808|807|806|805|804| 803|802|801|800|699|698|697|696|695|694|693| 692|691|690|689|688|687|686|685|684|683|682| 681|680|679|678|677|676|675|674|673|672|671| 670|599|598|597|596|595|594|593|592|591|590| 509|508|507|506|505|504|503|502|501|500|429| 428|427|426|425|424|423|422|421|420|389|388| 387|386|385|384|383|382|381|380|379|378|377| 376|375|374|373|372|371|370|359|358|357|356| 355|354|353|352|351|350|299|298|297|296|295| 294|293|292|291|290|289|288|287|286|285|284| 283|282|281|280|269|268|267|266|265|264|263| 262|261|260|259|258|257|256|255|254|253|252| 251|250|249|248|247|246|245|244|243|242|241| 240|239|238|237|236|235|234|233|232|231|230| 229|228|227|226|225|224|223|222|221|220|219| 218|217|216|215|214|213|212|211|210|98|95|94| 93|92|91|90|86|84|82|81|66|65|64|63|62|61|60| 58|57|56|55|54|53|52|51|49|48|47|46|45|44|43| 41|40|39|36|34|33|32|31|30|27|20|7|1)[0-9]{0, 14}$

11
  • 17
    Almost had it right... "011" is not part of an international code. It's just what people in the US need to dial in order to place an international call. That prefix will change depending on where you dial from... So that prefix is NOT part of the number. Jan 21, 2010 at 23:51
  • 4
    @gmagana - I mention that in my answer (paragraph 2) Jan 21, 2010 at 23:53
  • 2
    My point is that it's not part of the phone number. That's like saying the "1" US national long distance dialing prefix is part of the phone number. Jan 21, 2010 at 23:55
  • 2
    @gmagana - while you are right that it is not part of the phone number, it is technically required to make the call. Jan 22, 2010 at 0:06
  • 4
    @Roger Pate: I spent a bit of time figuring this out and I hope it will be useful to others. I also hoped that someone else might have a better solution (which is why I haven't marked my own answer as accepted). Jan 22, 2010 at 0:43
41

This is a further optimisation.

\+(9[976]\d|8[987530]\d|6[987]\d|5[90]\d|42\d|3[875]\d|
2[98654321]\d|9[8543210]|8[6421]|6[6543210]|5[87654321]|
4[987654310]|3[9643210]|2[70]|7|1)
\W*\d\W*\d\W*\d\W*\d\W*\d\W*\d\W*\d\W*\d\W*(\d{1,2})$

(i) allows for valid international prefixes
(ii) followed by 9 or 10 digits, with any type or placing of delimeters (except between the last two digits)

This will match:

+1-234-567-8901  
+61-234-567-89-01  
+46-234 5678901  
+1 (234) 56 89 901  
+1 (234) 56-89 901  
+46.234.567.8901  
+1/234/567/8901  
3
  • I know this is an old answer, but is there any option to make the 1 optional for American numbers? Dec 1, 2016 at 18:23
  • What you want to do is (i) make the "+" optional and (ii) the international code optional. So place "?" after the + and after the first close bracket.
    – fezfox
    Dec 4, 2016 at 3:31
  • @ManosPasgiannis well yes, as specified "followed by 9 or 10 digits". It would appear in cyprus you use 8, so just adjust the last sequence by removing once instance of \d\W* and make the last expression (\d{1,3})
    – fezfox
    Dec 4, 2016 at 3:35
32

No criticism regarding those great answers I just want to present the simple solution I use for our admin content creators:

^(\+|00)[1-9][0-9 \-\(\)\.]{7,32}$

Force start with a plus or two zeros and use at least a little bit of numbers. White space, brackets, minus and point are optional, no other characters allowed.

You can safely remove all non-numbers (except for the +) and use this in a tel: input. Numbers will have a common form of representation and I do not have to worry about being to restrictive.

31

You can use the library libphonenumber from Google.

PhoneNumberUtil phoneNumberUtil = PhoneNumberUtil.getInstance();
String decodedNumber = null;
PhoneNumber number;
    try {
        number = phoneNumberUtil.parse(encodedHeader, null);
        decodedNumber = phoneNumberUtil.format(number, PhoneNumberFormat.E164);
    } catch (NumberParseException e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }
3
  • 3
    It could be a good solution but just to check phone numbers, before using this library, you have to import a huge amount of js...because libphonenumber.js needs closure library... it's not a light solution :/
    – J.BizMai
    Sep 19, 2017 at 14:18
  • @J.BizMai not exactly... closure library code is designed to be compiled using Closure Compiler which does dead code elimination. With advanced optimizations enabled the compiled lib would probably be very light and performant.
    – Pocketsand
    Feb 22, 2021 at 11:35
  • Thanks for contributing this here. Just wanted to mention the Python port if anyone is interested. It's more of a "light solution" if @J.BizMai's comments resonate with you: github.com/daviddrysdale/python-phonenumbers Feb 16, 2023 at 21:11
29

Modified @Eric's regular expression - added a list of all country codes (got them from xxxdepy @ Github. I hope you will find it helpful:

/(\+|00)(297|93|244|1264|358|355|376|971|54|374|1684|1268|61|43|994|257|32|229|226|880|359|973|1242|387|590|375|501|1441|591|55|1246|673|975|267|236|1|61|41|56|86|225|237|243|242|682|57|269|238|506|53|5999|61|1345|357|420|49|253|1767|45|1809|1829|1849|213|593|20|291|212|34|372|251|358|679|500|33|298|691|241|44|995|44|233|350|224|590|220|245|240|30|1473|299|502|594|1671|592|852|504|385|509|36|62|44|91|246|353|98|964|354|972|39|1876|44|962|81|76|77|254|996|855|686|1869|82|383|965|856|961|231|218|1758|423|94|266|370|352|371|853|590|212|377|373|261|960|52|692|389|223|356|95|382|976|1670|258|222|1664|596|230|265|60|262|264|687|227|672|234|505|683|31|47|977|674|64|968|92|507|64|51|63|680|675|48|1787|1939|850|351|595|970|689|974|262|40|7|250|966|249|221|65|500|4779|677|232|503|378|252|508|381|211|239|597|421|386|46|268|1721|248|963|1649|235|228|66|992|690|993|670|676|1868|216|90|688|886|255|256|380|598|1|998|3906698|379|1784|58|1284|1340|84|678|681|685|967|27|260|263)(9[976]\d|8[987530]\d|6[987]\d|5[90]\d|42\d|3[875]\d|2[98654321]\d|9[8543210]|8[6421]|6[6543210]|5[87654321]|4[987654310]|3[9643210]|2[70]|7|1)\d{4,20}$/
0
16

I use this one:

/([0-9\s\-]{7,})(?:\s*(?:#|x\.?|ext\.?|extension)\s*(\d+))?$/

Advantages: recognizes + or 011 beginnings, lets it be as long as needed, and handles many extension conventions. (#,x,ext,extension)

1
  • This one comes pretty close to most international phone number formats.
    – feeela
    Mar 27, 2019 at 12:44
13

This will work for international numbers;

C#:

@"^((\+\d{1,3}(-| )?\(?\d\)?(-| )?\d{1,5})|(\(?\d{2,6}\)?))(-| )?(\d{3,4})(-| )?(\d{4})(( x| ext)\d{1,5}){0,1}$"

JS:

/^((\+\d{1,3}(-| )?\(?\d\)?(-| )?\d{1,5})|(\(?\d{2,6}\)?))(-| )?(\d{3,4})(-| )?(\d{4})(( x| ext)\d{1,5}){0,1}$/
0
9

Here's an "optimized" version of your regex:

^011(9[976]\d|8[987530]\d|6[987]\d|5[90]\d|42\d|3[875]\d|
2[98654321]\d|9[8543210]|8[6421]|6[6543210]|5[87654321]|
4[987654310]|3[9643210]|2[70]|7|1)\d{0,14}$

You can replace the \ds with [0-9] if your regex syntax doesn't support \d.

9

For iOS SWIFT I found this helpful,

let phoneRegEx = "^((\\+)|(00)|(\\*)|())[0-9]{3,14}((\\#)|())$"
1
  • failed for +91 9999999999 Jun 21, 2017 at 20:25
9

I only check for valid characters and allow up to 30 characters. Numbers that include an extension are also possible.

^[\+\(\s.\-\/\d\)]{5,30}$

Matches the following:

(0123) 123 456 1
555-555-5555
0049 1555 532-3455
123 456 7890
0761 12 34 56
+49 123 1-234-567-8901
+61-234-567-89-01
+46-234 5678901
+1 (234) 56 89 901
+1 (234) 56-89 901
+46.234.567.8901
+1/234/567/8901
3
  • Thanks for this - many people want to enter their number differently, some with + some with 00, some with ext, so local, so this is perfect for loosely capturing them,
    – Kingsley
    Nov 17, 2022 at 17:01
  • 1
    This is one of the best and simplest answers here. Depending on your use-case though, it may not be suitable, eg. it matches 1 )212) 366-1182 and things like a long US postal code: 12345-1234. This may be OK for basic form validation, but definitely not for extraction of business info from a webpage, for example. Great answer regardless. Feb 16, 2023 at 21:05
  • But it validates a string like ++++++ Mar 18 at 10:00
6

Here is a regex for the following most common phone number scenarios. Although this is tailored from a US perspective for area codes it works for international scenarios.

  1. The actual number should be 10 digits only.
  2. For US numbers area code may be surrounded with parentheses ().
  3. The country code can be 1 to 3 digits long. Optionally may be preceded by a + sign.
  4. There may be dashes, spaces, dots or no spaces between country code, area code and the rest of the number.
  5. A valid phone number cannot be all zeros.

    ^(?!\b(0)\1+\b)(\+?\d{1,3}[. -]?)?\(?\d{3}\)?([. -]?)\d{3}\3\d{4}$
    

Explanation:

    ^ - start of expression  
    (?!\b(0)\1+\b) - (?!)Negative Look ahead. \b - word boundary around a '0' character. \1 backtrack to previous capturing group (zero). Basically don't match all zeros.  
    (\+?\d{1,3}[. -]?)? - '\+?' plus sign before country code is optional.\d{1,3} - country code can be 1 to 3 digits long. '[. -]?' - spaces,dots and dashes are optional. The last question mark is to make country code optional.  
    \(?\d{3}\)? - '\)?' is to make parentheses optional. \d{3} - match 3 digit area code.  
    ([. -]?) - optional space, dash or dot
    $ - end of expression

More examples and explanation - https://regex101.com/r/hTH8Ct/2/

6

I have used this below:

^(\+|00)[0-9]{1,3}[0-9]{4,14}(?:x.+)?$

The format +CCC.NNNNNNNNNNxEEEE or 00CCC.NNNNNNNNNNxEEEE

Phone number must start with '+' or '00' for an international call. where C is the 1–3 digit country code,

N is up to 14 digits,

and E is the (optional) extension.

The leading plus sign and the dot following the country code are required. The literal “x” character is required only if an extension is provided.

6

I made the regexp for european phone numbers, and it is specific against dial prefix vs length of number.

const PhoneEuropeRegExp = () => {
    // eu phones map https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_numbers_in_Europe
    const phonesMap = {
        "43": [4, 13],
        "32": [8, 10],
        "359": [7, 9],
        "385": [8, 9],
        "357": 8,
        "420": 9,
        "45": 8,
        "372": 7,
        "358": [5, 12],
        "33": 9,
        "350": 8,
        "49": [3, 12],
        "30": 10,
        "36": [8, 9],
        "354": [7, 9],
        "353": [7, 9],
        "39": [6, 12],
        "371": 8,
        "423": [7, 12],
        "370": 8,
        "352": 8,
        "356": 8,
        "31": 9,
        "47": [4, 12],
        "48": 9,
        "351": 9,
        "40": 9,
        "421": 9,
        "386": 8,
        "34": 9,
        "46": [6, 9],
    };
    const regExpBuilt = Object.keys(phonesMap)
        .reduce(function(prev, key) {
            const val = phonesMap[key];
            if (Array.isArray(val)) {
                prev.push("(\\+" + key + `[0-9]\{${val[0]},${val[1]}\})`);
            } else {
                prev.push("(\\+" + key + `[0-9]\{${val}\})`);
            }
            return prev;
        }, [])
        .join("|");
    return new RegExp(`^(${regExpBuilt})$`);
};

alert(PhoneEuropeRegExp().test("+420123456789"))
4

It works pretty well with 00xx and +xx:

^(?:00|\+)(9[976]\d|8[987530]\d|6[987]\d|5[90]\d|42\d|3[875]\d|2[98654321]\d|9[8543210]|8[6421]|6[6543210]|5[87654321]|4[987654310]|3[9643210]|2[70]|7|1)\d{1,14}$
3

There's obviously a multitude of ways to do this, as evidenced by all of the different answers given thus far, but I'll throw my $0.02 worth in here and provide the regex below, which is a bit more terse than nearly all of the above, but more thorough than most as well. It also has the nice side-effect of leaving the country code in $1 and the local number in $2.

^\+(?=\d{5,15}$)(1|2[078]|3[0-469]|4[013-9]|5[1-8]|6[0-6]|7|8[1-469]|9[0-58]|[2-9]..)(\d+)$

2

A simple version for european numbers, that matches numbers like 0034617393211 but also long ones as 004401484172842.

^0{2}[0-9]{11,}

Hope it helps :·)

2
public static boolean validateInternationalPhoneNumberFormat(String phone) {
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(200);

    // Country code
    sb.append("^(\\+{1}[\\d]{1,3})?");

    // Area code, with or without parentheses
    sb.append("([\\s])?(([\\(]{1}[\\d]{2,3}[\\)]{1}[\\s]?)|([\\d]{2,3}[\\s]?))?");

    // Phone number separator can be "-", "." or " "

    // Minimum of 5 digits (for fixed line phones in Solomon Islands)
    sb.append("\\d[\\-\\.\\s]?\\d[\\-\\.\\s]?\\d[\\-\\.\\s]?\\d[\\-\\.\\s]?\\d[\\-\\.\\s]?");

    // 4 more optional digits
    sb.append("\\d?[\\-\\.\\s]?\\d?[\\-\\.\\s]?\\d?[\\-\\.\\s]?\\d?$");

    return Pattern.compile(sb.toString()).matcher(phone).find();
}
1
  • 3
    While this code snippet may answer the question, it doesn't provide any context to explain how or why. Consider adding a sentence or two to explain your answer. Oct 31, 2016 at 18:32
0

The international numbering plan is based on the ITU E.164 numbering plan. I guess that's the starting point to your regular expression.

I'll update this if I get around to create a regular expression based on the ITU E.164 numbering.

0

This Regex Expression works for India, Canada, Europe, New Zealand, Australia, United States phone numbers, along with their country codes:

"^(\+(([0-9]){1,2})[-.])?((((([0-9]){2,3})[-.]){1,2}([0-9]{4,10}))|([0-9]{10}))$"

0

This works for me, without 00, 001, 0011 etc prefix though:

/^\+*(\d{3})*[0-9,\-]{8,}/
0

Try this, it works for me.

^(00|\+)[1-9]{1}([0-9][\s]*){9,16}$
0
^\+[1-9]\d{10,14}$

This will match "e164 phone numbers"

0

Added for latest info in 2023

If you want to keep is as simple as possible, just inform your users to enter the + prefix and the full number, using digits only.

Then the regex is simple, your UI is simple, there is no confusion, no cleanup and ALL numbers can be entered and stored in the same format.

\+\d{7,15}
  1. Must start with +
  2. Can be followed by 7-15 digits.

Thanks to the international phone numbering plan (ITU-T E. 164), phone numbers cannot contain more than 15 digits. The shortest international phone numbers in use contain seven digits.

This would be perfect, for example, if you only needed to capture mobile numbers to send an OPT code or SMS.

But if you want to be more specific the EPP standard has fast become adopted, since most domain registration services use it.

In which case you need:

^\+[0-9]{1,3}\.[0-9]{4,14}(?:x.+)?$

EPP-style phone numbers use the format +CCC.NNNNNNNNNNxEEEE, where C is the 1–3 digit country code, N is up to 14 digits, and E is the (optional) extension. The leading plus sign and the dot following the country code are required. The literal “x” character is required only if an extension is provided.

Source: https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/regular-expressions-cookbook/9781449327453/ch04s03.html#:~:text=Thanks%20to%20the%20international%20phone,in%20use%20contain%20seven%20digits.

0

Many of the solutions do not take into account that the + in the country code can be replaced with 00. Hence created another variant of the regex. Hope it helps!

^(\+|00)[1-9]{1}[0-9]{3,14}$

Note: I am talking about international mobile numbers.

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