fiogf49gjkf0d Other than in remote areas,
communications
in Panama are good. Most small towns have a post office and telephone office, so keeping in touch with home is fairly easy.
Letters
posted with the Correo Nacional (COTEL) cost US$0.35 to the US and US$0.45 to Europe. They should reach either destination within a week or two, though have been known to take far longer - it's best to post them in Panama City. Most post offices have an
Entrega General
(Poste Restante, General Delivery) where you can
receive mail
- in Panama City your correspondent must specify the post office zone: the most central is Zone 5, on Av Central/Via Espana. Post office
opening hours
are generally from 7am to 6pm Monday to Friday, 7am to 5pm on Saturday.
Panama's recently privatized
telephone
company is owned by Cable and Wireless (C&W).
Local phone calls
are cheap, and there's a wide network of modern payphones that take phonecards sold in shops and street stalls. You can make
international collect calls
from these via the international operator (dial 106), and both AT&T (dial 109) and MCI (dial 108) can place collect or credit-card calls to the US. Otherwise, C&W offices are the best place to make international calls or send
faxes
. Hotels tend to overcharge for phone calls. Panama's
country code
is 507; there are no regional codes for internal calls. As elsewhere, there's a growing number of
Internet
cafes in the main towns.
Other useful information
for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):
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