Telecom Packages

Warid Call Packages — Hourly, Daily, Monthly Compared

Our Verdict

Warid Monthly Hybrid (Rs. 580) is the strongest monthly call bundle on a Warid SIM — 5,000 on-net + 200 off-net + 5,000 SMS + 3 GB. Because Warid runs on the same network as Jazz post-merger, the bundle structure mirrors Jazz almost exactly; the only real difference is the SIM brand and the activation codes. If you're holding a Warid SIM, the bundles work fine — but there's little reason to choose a new Warid SIM over a Jazz one in 2026.

Top Warid call bundles compared side-by-side

CriteriaDaily Warid VoiceWeekly All-NetworkMonthly Hybrid
PriceRs. 8Rs. 110Rs. 580 Best monthly
On-net minutes100 Warid + Jazz700 on-net5,000 on-net
Off-net minutes050200
SMS included1001005,000
Data included75 MB250 MB3 GB
Validity1 day7 days30 days
Activation*118*1#*114*7#*114*30#

The Warid situation in 2026 — a practical primer

Warid Telecom was an independent Pakistani mobile operator from 2005 until 2017, when it was acquired by Mobilink (the operator now branded as Jazz). The merger consolidated the two networks technically — they share spectrum, towers, and core network infrastructure — but kept both brands alive at the retail level. A Warid SIM in 2026 is, for all practical purposes, a Jazz SIM with a different number prefix (0321) and a different set of activation codes. The bundles you get, the speeds you experience, and the coverage you have access to are identical.

The most consequential post-merger detail for users: calls between Warid and Jazz numbers count as on-net. If your Warid Monthly Hybrid gives you 5,000 on-net minutes, those minutes apply to all 0321 Warid numbers and all Jazz prefixes (0300, 0301, 0302, 0303, 0304, 0305, 0306). For households with mixed Warid and Jazz contacts — which is common given how long both brands have been around — this is a real saving compared to Telenor or Ufone users, whose on-net pools cover only their own carrier's prefixes.

Warid daily call packages — the smallest commitment

The Daily Warid Voice at Rs. 8 (100 minutes covering both Warid and Jazz numbers, 100 SMS, 75 MB of data) is the cheapest entry point. The 100-minute allowance is designed for someone who makes a handful of calls during the day rather than continuous calling; one long catch-up call or two medium ones uses most of it. The Daily Hybrid at Rs. 16 doubles the on-net minutes and adds five off-net minutes plus 100 MB of data — useful if you occasionally call non-Warid/non-Jazz numbers.

The Daily Super Plus at Rs. 22 (1,000 on-net + 100 SMS + 100 MB) has the same theoretical headline as Jazz's Super Daily Plus — 1,000 minutes is more than a normal person uses in 24 hours, but the cap exists so that the bundle prices headline-competitively. Most users default to either the Voice (cheapest) or the Hybrid (best balance), depending on whether they need data with their calls.

Warid weekly call packages — the in-between band

The Warid Weekly All-Network at Rs. 110 gives 700 on-net + 50 off-net minutes for seven days, which works out to roughly 100 on-net minutes per day plus a handful of off-net minutes per day. The Weekly Hybrid at Rs. 220 doubles the on-net allowance and bumps the off-net to 60, adding 1,500 SMS and 1 GB of data.

The weekly band suits genuinely week-long needs — a wedding week with extended family coordination, a sales trip to another city, an Eid week of catching up with distant contacts. For habitual callers, stacking four weeklies in a month costs more than the equivalent monthly bundle and is more activation hassle. The weekly tier earns its place when your calling pattern is week-by-week variable, not month-after-month consistent.

Warid monthly call packages — where regular callers belong

The Warid Monthly Hybrid at Rs. 580 is the default monthly bundle most regular Warid users should subscribe to. The 5,000 on-net minutes cover anything reasonable — about 165 per day — and the on-net pool covers both Warid and Jazz prefixes, which is the largest combined on-net network among Pakistani operators. The 200 off-net minutes are tighter; if your spouse, employer, or close contact is on Telenor, Ufone, or Zong, watch the off-net counter.

The Monthly Voice Bundle at Rs. 390 strips out data and gives you 3,000 pure on-net minutes plus 3,000 SMS — a fit for users who keep mobile data off most of the time. The Monthly Super Duper Plus at Rs. 1,066 doubles everything except off-net (which stays at 200): 8,000 on-net, 8,000 SMS, 12 GB of data. This tier targets the heavy user whose phone is the household's primary device.

All Warid call packages — full lineup

PackagePriceMinutesSMS / DataValidityCode
Daily Warid VoiceRs. 8100 Warid + Jazz100 SMS + 75 MB1 day*118*1#
Daily HybridRs. 16200 on-net + 5 off-net100 SMS + 100 MB1 day*118*2#
Daily Super PlusRs. 221,000 on-net100 SMS + 100 MB1 day*118*3#
Weekly All-NetworkRs. 110700 on-net + 50 off-net100 SMS + 250 MB7 days*114*7#
Weekly HybridRs. 2201,000 on-net + 60 off-net1,500 SMS + 1 GB7 days*114*8#
Monthly Voice BundleRs. 3903,000 on-net3,000 SMS30 days*114*29#
Monthly HybridRs. 5805,000 on-net + 200 off-net5,000 SMS + 3 GB30 days*114*30#
Monthly Super Duper PlusRs. 1,0668,000 on-net + 200 off-net8,000 SMS + 12 GB30 days*114*31#

The future of the Warid brand in Pakistani telecom

Jazz hasn't formally announced a retirement of the Warid brand, but the trajectory is visible — new bundles get launched on Jazz first and replicated to Warid afterwards, retail marketing centres on the Jazz brand, and the integrated Jazz World mobile app supports both number prefixes. The Warid brand most likely persists as long as there's a meaningful base of long-tenure 0321 users who'd resist a forced brand migration. A complete retirement is possible within the next five to ten years but not announced for 2026.

For users with active Warid numbers, none of this is urgent. Your bundle continues working, your number stays the same, the network behind it is among the strongest in Pakistan because it's the Jazz network. If Jazz ever retires the Warid brand formally, the migration would be administrative — same SIM, same number, just rebranded paperwork.

How to activate, check, and manage Warid bundles

Each Warid bundle activates by dialling its code from the table — confirm the deduction at the prompt. For checking remaining minutes, SMS, and data, dial *200# from your Warid number, the same code that works on Jazz. The Jazz World app supports Warid numbers natively; sign in with your Warid number and you get the same dashboard interface as Jazz users.

To stop auto-renewal on a monthly Warid bundle, dial *101*4# or use the Jazz World app's Subscriptions tab. The cancellation only blocks the next renewal cycle; the current bundle runs to its full validity. As with Jazz, Warid doesn't send a renewal reminder until after the renewal succeeds or fails — set your own calendar reminder a day before if you want to cancel before the next charge.

When to pick which Warid call package

Choose a Daily Warid bundle if:
  • You only call on certain days, not every day
  • Most of your contacts are on Warid or Jazz (treated as the same network)
  • You don't want to commit to a month at once
Choose a Warid Monthly bundle if:
  • You call regularly through the month
  • You also need SMS and data in one allowance
  • You'd otherwise stack four weekly bundles (Rs. 440 vs Rs. 580 for more)
Verify before activation: Warid bundle prices and codes track the Jazz lineup closely — both are refreshed together every few months. Verify any specific bundle by dialling the code from a Warid SIM (which always confirms the live price before deduction) or via the Jazz World app, which serves both brands.

Warid call package questions readers send in

Is Warid still a separate carrier, or has it fully merged into Jazz?

Warid was acquired by Mobilink (now Jazz) in 2017, and the two networks have been technically integrated since then. The Warid brand still exists — you can still buy a Warid SIM, the number range starting with 0321 is still active — but the underlying network infrastructure is shared with Jazz. From a network-engineering perspective Warid and Jazz are one carrier; from a SIM-purchase perspective, they're still marketed as two. The PTA tracks them as one operator (Mobilink/Jazz/Warid combined).

Can I activate a Jazz call package on my Warid number directly using Jazz codes?

No — the SIM identity determines which set of codes works. A Warid SIM uses Warid activation codes (the *114* and *118* range above); a Jazz SIM uses Jazz codes (*211#, *430#, *707#). The bundles are roughly equivalent in volume and price, but each side of the brand has its own code namespace. If you try to dial a Jazz code from a Warid number, the system will either reject it with a 'service not available' message or activate a different Warid bundle that happens to share part of the code pattern. Stick to the codes for your specific SIM brand.

Why do some retailers still sell brand-new Warid SIMs if Warid has merged with Jazz?

Two reasons. First, the Warid SIM inventory still exists at distributors and franchise stores — Jazz has been selling through the existing stock rather than recalling it. Second, some users genuinely prefer to keep the Warid brand identity, particularly long-time customers whose numbers start with the 0321 prefix that they've used for fifteen-plus years. Jazz keeps issuing new Warid SIMs at low volume to retain those users and not force a brand migration. For a first-time customer in 2026, choosing Warid over Jazz makes little practical sense — the bundles and network are identical, and Jazz has slightly broader customer-service infrastructure.

Do calls between Warid and Jazz numbers count as on-net or off-net?

On-net. Since the 2017 merger, Warid and Jazz are treated as a single network for billing purposes. A call from a Warid number to a Jazz number deducts from your on-net allowance, and vice versa. This is one of the genuine advantages of either Warid or Jazz over Telenor, Zong, or Ufone — your on-net pool covers both brand prefixes (0321 Warid plus 0300/0301/0303/0302 Jazz). Anyone whose family or office contacts mix Warid and Jazz numbers gets the cheaper on-net rate for all internal communication.

What happened to old Warid-specific bundles that don't exist in the post-merger lineup?

Most legacy Warid bundles were retired in 2018–2019 as Jazz aligned the two lineups. The current Warid bundle list is essentially a Warid-branded version of the Jazz lineup — same prices, same volumes, same FUP rules, different activation codes. A few historical Warid promotional codes still work for old subscribers who activated them years ago, but they're no longer offered to new users. If you remember a specific Warid bundle from earlier years and the code now returns an error, it's been retired; check the current activation menu at *114# for the live lineup.

How do I check whether a Pakistani number is registered as Warid or Jazz?

The number prefix tells you. Pakistani mobile numbers use 5-digit prefixes that map to operators: 0321 is Warid, 0300/0301/0302/0303 are Jazz (originally Mobilink), 0304/0305/0306 are Jazz too. For practical billing purposes since 2017, the Jazz and Warid prefixes are the same network — your on-net minutes cover both. Telenor uses 0345, 0346, 0340, 0341; Ufone uses 0331, 0332, 0333, 0334; Zong uses 0311, 0312, 0313, 0314, 0317. The first three digits after the leading 0 are enough to identify the carrier in nearly every case.