Jazz Call Packages

Jazz offers daily, weekly and monthly call packages built for every kind of caller. Here is how to figure out which one fits your usage best.

Jazz is Pakistan's largest mobile operator by subscriber count, and most of their call packages exist because people in this country still talk on the phone a lot — to family in another city, to a shopkeeper before placing an order, to a tailor about a delivery date. If you make more than ten calls a day and you have never subscribed to a package, you are almost certainly paying too much.

Who should buy a Jazz call package

If you have any of the following habits, a call package will save you money:

If you only make occasional calls and otherwise rely on WhatsApp, a package may not be worth it. The pay-as-you-go rate is fine for someone who calls less than five times a week and stays brief.

Things to consider before picking one

On-net versus off-net is the first thing to check. 'On-net' means calling another Jazz number — these are almost always cheaper or free inside a package. 'Off-net' means calling Telenor, Ufone, Zong or a PTCL landline — these minutes are limited even in big packages. If the people you call most are not on Jazz, a Jazz package gives you less than you think.

The second thing is validity. A package valid for one day looks cheap (Rs. 18 for 75 minutes) but if you only use 20 minutes that day, the rest is gone at midnight. A weekly or monthly package spreads the minutes more evenly and usually costs less per minute.

The third thing is hidden bundles. Many Jazz call packages include free SMS and a small amount of mobile data. If you already pay for a separate internet package, you might be double-paying. Read the package details before subscribing.

A simple rule of thumb: count how many minutes you used last week. If you used under 50, a daily package on heavy days is fine. If you used between 50 and 300, a weekly package will be the best balance of price and flexibility. If you used over 300, only a monthly package will be economical — daily and weekly renewals add up quickly when you stack them.

Postpaid users get different packages and usually do not need to subscribe to anything separately — call minutes are already included in the monthly plan. The packages on this page are for prepaid users only.

All current Jazz call packages

The table below covers every Jazz call package widely available in 2026. Prices include tax. Codes are dialled exactly as written, no spaces.

Current Jazz call packages and activation codes
PackageWhat you getValidityPriceCode
Daily Voice75 on-net + 5 off-net mins24 hoursRs. 18*211#
3-Day Voice300 on-net + 30 off-net mins3 daysRs. 55*414#
Weekly Voice1,500 on-net + 150 off-net + 100 SMS + 100 MB7 daysRs. 250*612#
Weekly Super Duper4,000 on-net + 100 off-net + 2 GB social + 4 GB7 daysRs. 290*505#
Monthly Voice5,000 on-net + 500 off-net + 200 SMS30 daysRs. 850*707#
Monthly Super DuperUnlimited on-net + 700 off-net + 12 GB internet30 daysRs. 1,100*6464#
Late Night VoiceUnlimited on-net (1 am – 9 am only)24 hoursRs. 12*7000#

Jazz updates package pricing roughly every quarter. Before subscribing to anything that costs over Rs. 200, dial *111# and confirm the live price.

How to subscribe to any of these

  1. Make sure your balance covers the price

    Dial *111# to see your current balance. If you have less than the package price, top up first — Jazz packages do not subscribe partially.

  2. Dial the activation code

    Use your phone's dialler to call the exact code from the table above. Do not add or remove characters. Press call.

  3. Wait for the confirmation SMS

    Within thirty seconds you should receive a confirmation message from 7886 or a similar Jazz short code. If no SMS arrives in two minutes, dial *117*7# to check status.

  4. Note the unsubscribe code

    The confirmation SMS includes an unsubscribe code. Save this. Most call packages auto-renew at the end of the validity period, and the unsubscribe code is the only way to stop that.

Common questions about Jazz call packages

One more thing

Jazz call packages were one of the first widely-used mobile services in Pakistan back when the network was called Mobilink — which is why some of the older codes still reference that name. The packages, prices and codes have changed many times since then, and they will keep changing.

Treat any specific price you read online — including on this page — as a starting reference. The *111# menu on your phone always shows the live, official price set by the network on that day, and the My Jazz app shows the same information with package descriptions in Urdu and English. If a price in the table above does not match what you see on the live menu, trust the menu.