Gem Net Pakistan

Warid Call Packages — All Voice Bundles & Codes 2026

By the Gem Net editorial team · Updated Friday, June 12, 2026

Warid hasn't existed as an independent operator since its merger into Jazz completed, but millions of Warid-numbered SIMs remain active — and the people holding them keep searching for Warid call packages. The honest answer: your Warid SIM runs entirely on Jazz's network now, a shrinking set of legacy Warid codes still responds, and for anything the legacy codes don't cover, the full Jazz call lineup is available to you directly. This page maps what still works to what replaced it.

Top questions answered

Is Warid still a separate network from Jazz in 2026?

No. Warid's merger into Jazz completed years ago — there is one physical network, one billing system, and one customer service line. A Warid-numbered SIM is functionally a Jazz SIM that kept its original number prefix. Coverage, call quality, and data speed are identical to any Jazz SIM in the same location.

Do old Warid package codes still work on my SIM?

Some do. A subset of Warid-era USSD codes were kept alive and silently remapped to Jazz bundles behind the scenes. Others return an invalid-code error. The table on this page lists the legacy codes that responded in our Q2 2026 test, alongside the current Jazz code that buys the same thing.

Can I subscribe to normal Jazz call bundles from a Warid SIM?

Yes — every Jazz bundle code works on a Warid-numbered SIM exactly as it would on a Jazz SIM. Dial *100# for Daily Voice or *700# for Weekly All Rounder and the subscription goes through normally. The Warid prefix on your number changes nothing about which bundles you can buy.

What happened to Warid, briefly

Warid Telecom launched in Pakistan in 2005 with Abu Dhabi Group backing and built a reputation for voice quality in Punjab's urban corridors. The Mobilink merger — announced in 2015, completed operationally over the following years — created the entity now branded Jazz. Spectrum, towers, and subscribers were consolidated onto one network. What survives of Warid today is the number prefix, some legacy USSD aliases, and the search traffic of subscribers who never stopped thinking of their SIM as a Warid SIM.

Legacy Warid voice codes that still respond

In our Q2 2026 test from a live Warid-numbered SIM, the codes below activated successfully. Each one silently subscribes a Jazz bundle — the confirmation SMS arrives with Jazz branding, and the allocations match the Jazz SKU listed in the rightmost column. If any legacy code stops responding, the Jazz equivalent buys the same allocations at the same price.

Legacy bundleWarid codePriceWhat you getValidityJazz equivalent
Daily Voice (legacy)*200#Rs. 1245 mins all-Warid/Jazz + 5 other-net + 100 SMS1 dayJazz Daily Voice *100#
Weekly Voice (legacy)*201#Rs. 125900 Warid/Jazz mins + 45 other-net + 900 SMS7 daysJazz Weekly All Rounder *700#
Monthly Voice (legacy)*202#Rs. 5202800 Warid/Jazz mins + 180 other-net + 2800 SMS30 daysJazz Monthly Super Call *706#
Glow Hourly (legacy)*345*20#Rs. 655 on-net minutes for one hour1 hourJazz Power Hour *522#

Why you should probably use Jazz codes directly

Legacy aliases are a courtesy, not a commitment. Jazz has retired Warid-era codes in waves — each network software upgrade tends to drop a few more. Subscriptions made through an alias are identical to direct Jazz subscriptions once active, so there is no advantage to the legacy path beyond habit. The practical recommendation: learn the Jazz code for the bundle you actually use, because the alias will eventually go dark without notice.

The full current Jazz voice lineup — hourly, daily, weekly, monthly, hybrid — is documented on our Jazz call packages page, and every code there works from a Warid-prefix SIM without modification.

Billing changes Warid holdouts should know about

Three billing behaviours changed for Warid subscribers after consolidation. First, Warid-to-Jazz calls became on-net — bundles treat both prefixes as the same network, which effectively enlarged every subscriber's on-net calling universe overnight. Second, balance validity rules moved to Jazz's schedule, which is more generous at the low end: small recharges hold validity longer than Warid's old ladder allowed. Third, the Jazz World app replaced Warid's self-service portal entirely — bundle management, balance history, and complaint tickets all live there now.

Porting out versus staying on the merged network

Some Warid veterans considered porting to Zong, Telenor, or Ufone after the merger out of brand loyalty or pricing concerns. The pragmatic view: MNP (mobile number portability) takes one to two working days, costs nothing meaningful, and your 032x number travels with you. But the merged network's coverage is the widest in Pakistan, and per-bundle pricing is competitive at every tier. Port if a specific competitor bundle fits your usage better — not because the Warid brand disappeared. Sentiment is a poor reason to accept weaker coverage at your home address.

Reading a Warid bundle confirmation in 2026

Subscribers using legacy aliases sometimes worry the Jazz-branded confirmation means they were charged for the wrong thing. The confirmation is correct — read the allocation lines, not the brand name. A Daily Voice alias confirmation lists 40-odd minutes, an SMS count, and a midnight expiry; if those match the table on this page, the subscription did exactly what you asked. The only genuinely wrong outcome is an allocation that doesn't match any known SKU, which in our testing never occurred — aliases either work correctly or fail cleanly.

Balance checks for Warid-prefix subscribers run through Jazz's codes: *117*7*2# for the bundle breakdown, *111# for main balance. Memorising these two replaces the entire Warid-era self-service menu, most of which now returns errors.

The minute math for typical Warid holdout patterns

The archetypal remaining Warid subscriber is a long-tenure user whose calling is family-centred and mostly on-net. For that pattern, the weekly alias (or Jazz Weekly All Rounder directly) at Rs. 125–130 covers 900–1,000 on-net minutes — over two hours of calling per day — which no realistic family pattern exhausts. The cost trap to avoid is the off-net sliver: 45 other-network minutes across a week disappears in three calls to a Zong-holding relative, after which off-net calls drain main balance at Rs. 2.50-plus per minute. The fix is behavioural, not financial: ask frequent off-net contacts to call you back, or shift those conversations to WhatsApp voice, which consumes data instead of off-net minutes.

One-page action summary for Warid voice users

Condensed to the decisions that matter: keep the number, learn the Jazz codes, and budget around on-net reality. The legacy aliases in our table buy you time but not certainty — treat each one as deprecated. If your weekly voice spend exceeds Rs. 150 on repeated daily packs, step up to the weekly tier and bank the difference. And before any operator switch driven by frustration, isolate whether the problem is the network or one congested tower: a Rs. 0 test — borrowing a friend's SIM from the target operator for a day at your home and workplace — answers it definitively where coverage maps cannot.

Verify before relying: Warid-era codes were tested on a live Warid-numbered SIM in Q2 2026. Because Warid now runs entirely on Jazz infrastructure, Jazz reserves the right to retire legacy codes at any time — if a code fails, use the Jazz equivalent listed beside it.

Other Warid SIM questions

There's no indication of that. Number prefixes are PTA-allocated identifiers, and porting them away from active subscribers would create enormous disruption for no operational gain. Your 032x-prefix number works indefinitely on the merged network.

The network broadcast identity is Jazz's, because the physical network is Jazz's. Some handsets cache the old Warid carrier name for years after the merger; a SIM reseat or carrier-settings update usually flips the display to Jazz. The displayed name has no effect on billing or service.

On-net. Since the merger there is one network, so a call from a Warid-prefix number to a Jazz-prefix number consumes on-net minutes from any bundle. This is one of the few unambiguous wins from the merger for subscribers — the old Warid-to-Jazz off-net charge disappeared entirely.

Jazz channels: dial 111 from the SIM, use the Jazz World app, or visit any Jazz experience centre. Warid-branded franchises were rebranded years ago. The Jazz World app accepts Warid-prefix logins and shows the same bundle catalogue it shows Jazz-prefix users.

No — the catalogue is unified. The only Warid-specific artefacts left are the legacy USSD aliases that remap to Jazz bundles. Nothing is priced differently or allocated differently based on your number prefix.