The 01798 area code covers Pulborough and its surrounding regions.
Locations using the 01798 area code
- Bury
- Fittleworth
- Graffham
- Lodsworth
- Petworth
- Pulborough
- Sutton
- West Chiltington
When is it necessary to use the 01798 Pulborough dialling code?
If you're calling from outside the 01798 Pulborough area code, you'll need to use the dialling code. If you're using a landline or mobile phone within the same area code, you don't need to use the 01798 code. When calling from outside the UK, you'll need to include the international dialling code for your country, followed by the UK code (44) and the area code without the first zero (01798).
| Region | International Prefix | Phone Number | Phone Number to Dial |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States and Canada | 011 | 01798 365221 | 011 44 1798 365221 |
| Europe | 00 | 01798 879842 | 00 44 1798 879842 |
| Australia | 0011 | 01798 303565 | 0011 44 1798 303565 |
Locations (codes) near the 01798 code
- Aldershot 01252 area code is about 23 miles to the Northwest
- Alton 01420 area code is about 24 miles to the West-northwest
- Brighton 01273 area code is about 19 miles to the East-southeast
- Chichester 01243 area code is about 14 miles to the West-southwest
- Crawley 01293 area code is about 18 miles to the East-northeast
- Dorking 01306 area code is about 21 miles to the North-northeast
- East Grinstead 01342 area code is about 25 miles to the East-northeast
- Guildford 01483 area code is about 19 miles to the North-northwest
- Haslemere 01428 area code is about 13 miles to the West-northwest
- Haywards Heath 01444 area code is about 18 miles to the East
- Horsham 01403 area code is about 11 miles to the East-northeast
- Petersfield 01730 area code is about 19 miles to the West
- Redhill 01737 area code is about 24 miles to the Northeast
- Uckfield 01825 area code is about 26 miles to the East
- Worthing 01903 area code is about 12 miles to the Southeast
The Beginning of the 01798 Area Code
Prior to the PhONEday event in April 1995, the area code was 0798 and the historic mnemonic code was SX8, with the first two characters taken from the letters S and X in SusseX. On an old rotary dial telephone, this code would have been entered by dialling the numbers 7, 9, and 8.