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Call Signs and Country Prefixes

This reference summarizes amateur radio call-sign patterns, suffixes, country prefixes, and full call signs that appear in the BNetzA 2024 exam question catalog in data/2024-03-20-3-auflage/fragenkatalog3b.json.

Reference counts are the number of exam question records where the item appears in a call-sign or country-prefix context. Ambiguous short items such as K, N, W, /F, and class letters are counted only when they are used as call-sign prefixes, call-sign suffixes, or operating suffixes, not as ordinary words, units, or unrelated answer text.

German Call-Sign Patterns

Code or pattern What it identifies What the exam tests Explanation, when actually used Exam references Question IDs
DA0... German club station example. DA0ABC is a club station. Used as a shared station call sign assigned to a club or group. 1 BD101
DA5... German special experimental-study example. DA5XX marks operation for special experimental studies under AFuV. Used for specific authorized experimental amateur radio work. 1 BD102
DL0... German class A club station example. DL0XK is a class A club-station call sign. Used by a club station rather than a person-bound station. 1 BD103
DL1 to DL9 German person-bound class A call signs with two- or three-letter suffix. DL1 to DL9 plus suffix belongs to class A. Used as a German full-privilege personal amateur radio call-sign pattern. 1 BD104
DN9... German person-bound class N call sign pattern. DN9 belongs to class N. Used for German class N personal call signs. 1 BD105
DO1 to DO9 German person-bound class E call signs with two- or three-letter suffix. DO1 to DO9 plus suffix belongs to class E. Used as a German novice/intermediate personal call-sign pattern. 1 BD106
DP0... German exterritorial class A station examples. DP0GVN and DP0POL are exterritorial class A amateur stations. Used for German amateur stations operated at exterritorial locations. 2 BD107, BD108
German personal format Two-letter prefix, one digit, two- or three-letter suffix. Person-bound German call signs are built from prefix, digit, and suffix. Used to recognize the structure of ordinary German amateur call signs. 1 VD203
DA to DZ German country-prefix range with exceptions in distractors. Correct mapping: Germany DA-DR, South Korea DS-DT, Philippines DU-DZ. Used to identify the country allocation at the start of a call sign. 1 BD302
MO, MOE, MOI, MOS, MOH, MO5 Direction-finding (foxhunt/ARDF) transmitter identifiers, not call signs. Low-power beacons used for radio direction finding send MO, MOE, MOI, MOS, MOH or MO5. Used in telegraphy by ARDF/foxhunt transmitters to identify themselves while being located. 1 BD109

Operating Suffixes and Portable Prefixing

Code or pattern What it identifies What the exam tests Explanation, when actually used Exam references Question IDs
HB9/DL9MJ German class A station operating temporarily in Switzerland under CEPT. For CEPT operation abroad, use the visited country's prefix before the home call sign. Used when a German class A operator operates temporarily in Switzerland. 1 BD214
HB3/DO7PR German CEPT-Novice station operating temporarily in Switzerland. For Swiss novice CEPT operation, HB3/ is prefixed before the German DO call. Used when a German novice operator operates temporarily in Switzerland under the novice arrangement. 1 BD213
DL/G3MM Foreign station temporarily operating in Germany under CEPT. A UK station may temporarily operate in Germany by prefixing DL/. Used when a foreign operator identifies temporary operation from Germany. 1 BD212
DL/ or DO/ German prefix added before a foreign home call sign, depending on class. A CEPT visitor in Germany prefixes the home call with DL/ or DO/. Used by foreign CEPT operators while temporarily operating from Germany. 1 VB110
/T or /Trainee Training operation suffix. Trainees use the trainer or club call with /T or /Trainee, depending on the case. Used to identify supervised training operation. 3 BD209, BD210, BD211
/R or /Remote Remote-operation suffix. /R or /Remote can mark remote operation. Used as optional information that the station is being operated remotely. 1 BD208
/p Portable or temporarily fixed station. /p may be used in Germany, but is not mandatory for portable or temporarily fixed operation. Used to tell others the station is portable or temporarily away from the registered fixed site. 3 BA107, BD206, BD207
/m Mobile station or station on inland waterways. /m can mean mobile in a land vehicle or aboard a vessel on inland waters. Used to identify mobile operation. 2 BD203, BD204
/mm Maritime mobile on a vessel at sea. DC4LW/mm means the station is aboard a watercraft at sea. Used for maritime mobile amateur operation outside inland-waterway cases. 1 BD205
/am Aeronautical mobile. VE8ZZ/am is a Canadian amateur station operated aboard an aircraft. Used when an amateur station is operated from an aircraft. 2 BD201, BD202

Country Prefixes

Code or prefix Country or area What the exam tests Explanation, when actually used Exam references Question IDs
4X Israel. 4X, F, OZ map to Israel, France, Denmark. Used as the country prefix at the start of Israeli call signs. 2 BD307, BD311
AL United States prefix range item. Appears as a distractor in the USA, New Zealand, Argentina prefix question. Used as part of the US AA-AL prefix allocation, though not the main exam answer. 1 BD312
BY China. China, Canada, Australia are BY, VE, VK. Used as a Chinese amateur radio prefix. 4 BD313, BD316, BD317, BD318
CE Chile. South American examples include PY, CE, LU; also appears as a distractor. Used as a Chilean amateur radio prefix. 2 BD312, BD317
CT Portugal. Appears as a distractor among countries bordering Germany. Used as a Portuguese amateur radio prefix. 1 BD314
DS-DT South Korea. In the DA-DZ allocation question, DS-DT belongs to South Korea. Used to identify South Korean call signs in that prefix range. 3 BD302, BD316, BD318
DU-DZ Philippines. In the DA-DZ allocation question, DU-DZ belongs to the Philippines. Used to identify Philippine call signs in that prefix range. 1 BD302
EA Spain. Spain appears as EA; Switzerland, Spain, Belgium are HB9, EA, ON; EA6VQ is a Spanish station calling CQ. Used as a Spanish amateur radio prefix. 5 BD308, BD310, BD311, BD314, BE104
EI Ireland. EA, EI, EK, EM, ES map to Spain, Ireland, Armenia, Ukraine, Estonia. Used as an Irish amateur radio prefix. 2 BD308, BD311
EK Armenia. EK maps to Armenia in the five-prefix sequence. Used as an Armenian amateur radio prefix. 1 BD308
EM Ukraine. EM maps to Ukraine in the correct sequence and appears as a distractor elsewhere. Used as a Ukrainian amateur radio prefix. 2 BD308, BD311
ES Estonia. ES maps to Estonia in the five-prefix sequence. Used as an Estonian amateur radio prefix. 1 BD308
EU Belarus. Appears as a distractor in the Spain, Luxembourg, Poland question. Used as a Belarusian amateur radio prefix. 1 BD311
F France. France appears in border-country and prefix-mapping questions. Used as a French amateur radio prefix. 3 BD305, BD307, BD314
GM Scotland. Appears as a distractor among countries bordering Germany. Used for Scotland within the UK call-sign system. 1 BD314
HB0 Liechtenstein. Appears as a distractor among countries bordering Germany. Used as a Liechtenstein amateur radio prefix. 1 BD314
HB3 Switzerland novice CEPT prefix. German novice CEPT operation in Switzerland uses HB3/DO7PR. Used before a German novice home call when operating temporarily in Switzerland under the relevant arrangement. 2 BD213, BD214
HB9 Switzerland. Switzerland appears as HB9; used in CEPT and DX examples. Used as a Swiss amateur radio prefix. 5 BD213, BD214, BD310, BD314, BE114
I Italy. Appears as a distractor among countries bordering Germany. Used as an Italian amateur radio prefix. 1 BD314
JA Japan. Asian-prefix distractors and China, Canada, Australia choices include JA. Used as a Japanese amateur radio prefix. 4 BD313, BD316, BD317, BD318
K United States. USA call signs can start with K; also appears in country-prefix distractors. Used as a US amateur radio prefix. 4 BD312, BD315, BD316, BD318
LA Norway. Appears as a distractor in Europe-prefix questions. Used as a Norwegian amateur radio prefix. 2 BD311, BD314
LU Argentina. USA, New Zealand, Argentina are W, ZL, LU; also a South America distractor. Used as an Argentine amateur radio prefix. 4 BD311, BD312, BD317, BD318
LX Luxembourg. Spain, Luxembourg, Poland are EA, LX, SP. Used as a Luxembourg amateur radio prefix. 2 BD311, BD314
LZ Bulgaria. Appears as a distractor in European-prefix questions. Used as a Bulgarian amateur radio prefix. 2 BD311, BD314
N United States. USA call signs can start with N; also appears in distractors. Used as a US amateur radio prefix. 4 BD312, BD313, BD315, BD316
OE Austria. Austria, Netherlands, Sweden are OE, PA, SM; Austria, Belgium, Czechia are OE, ON, OK. Used as an Austrian amateur radio prefix. 3 BD303, BD304, BD314
OK Czechia. OE, ON, OK map to Austria, Belgium, Czechia. Used as a Czech amateur radio prefix. 2 BD303, BD314
ON Belgium. Switzerland, Spain, Belgium are HB9, EA, ON; OE, ON, OK includes Belgium. Used as a Belgian amateur radio prefix. 3 BD303, BD310, BD314
OZ Denmark. 4X, F, OZ map to Israel, France, Denmark; also border-country question. Used as a Danish amateur radio prefix. 2 BD307, BD314
PA Netherlands. France, Netherlands, Poland are F, PA, SP; Austria, Netherlands, Sweden are OE, PA, SM. Used as a Dutch amateur radio prefix. 2 BD304, BD305
PY Brazil. VE, VK, PY map to Canada, Australia, Brazil; PY also appears in long-path context. Used as a Brazilian amateur radio prefix. 5 AH216, BD309, BD312, BD317, BD318
SM Sweden. Sweden, Poland, South Africa are SM, SP, ZS; OE, PA, SM includes Sweden. Used as a Swedish amateur radio prefix. 4 BD304, BD306, BD311, BD314
SP Poland. Poland appears in border-country and mapping questions. Used as a Polish amateur radio prefix. 5 BD305, BD306, BD310, BD311, BD314
S0 Western Sahara. Appears as a distractor in the Spain, Luxembourg, Poland question. Used as a Western Sahara prefix in prefix lists. 1 BD311
SZ Greece prefix-series item. Appears as a distractor in the Switzerland, Spain, Belgium question. Used within Greek amateur radio prefix series. 1 BD310
UA Russia. Appears in UA3RUS, a distractor in the USA-only call-sign question. Used as a Russian amateur radio prefix. 1 BD315
US Ukraine. Appears in US2ABC, a distractor in the USA-only call-sign question. Used as a Ukrainian amateur radio prefix series. 1 BD315
VE Canada. Canada appears as VE; VE8ZZ/am is Canadian aeronautical mobile. Used as a Canadian amateur radio prefix. 7 BD202, BD309, BD312, BD313, BD315, BD316, BD317
VK Australia. Australia appears as VK; CQ VK/ZL asks for Australia or New Zealand. Used as an Australian amateur radio prefix. 4 BD309, BD313, BE110, EH217
VU India. BY, JA, VU are Asian prefixes in the correct answer. Used as an Indian amateur radio prefix. 1 BD318
W United States. USA, New Zealand, Argentina are W, ZL, LU; W, VE, XE share one continent; USA calls also include W.... Used as a US amateur radio prefix. 3 BD312, BD315, BD316
XE Mexico. North American-prefix distractor with W, VE, and N. Used as a Mexican amateur radio prefix. 1 BD316
ZL New Zealand. USA, New Zealand, Argentina are W, ZL, LU; CQ VK/ZL asks for Australia or New Zealand. Used as a New Zealand amateur radio prefix. 2 BD312, BE110
ZS South Africa. Sweden, Poland, South Africa are SM, SP, ZS; also appears as a distractor. Used as a South African amateur radio prefix. 2 BD306, BD312

Full Call Signs Mentioned

Call sign What it identifies What the exam tests Explanation, when actually used Exam references Question IDs
DD4UQ German call-sign example. Phonetic spelling and Fieldday contest example. Used as a normal station call sign; with /P it is portable. 2 BA101, BE116
DK1KC German phonetic spelling example. Spell as Delta Kilo 1 Kilo Charlie. Used as a station call sign that must be identified clearly on air. 1 BA102
DK5WP German phonetic spelling example. Spell as Delta Kilo 5 Whiskey Papa. Used as a station call sign that must be identified clearly on air. 1 BA103
DL1FLO German phonetic spelling example. Spell as Delta Lima 1 Foxtrot Lima Oscar. Used as a station call sign that must be identified clearly on air. 1 BA104
DL4YBZ German phonetic spelling example. Spell as Delta Lima 4 Yankee Bravo Zulu. Used as a station call sign that must be identified clearly on air. 1 BA105
DM4EAX German phonetic spelling example. Spell as Delta Mike 4 Echo Alfa X-ray. Used as a station call sign that must be identified clearly on air. 1 BA106
DN9RO/p German portable phonetic spelling example. Spell the call and /p as portable. Used when a class N station is portable or temporarily fixed. 1 BA107
DN9STV German class N phonetic spelling example. Spell as Delta November 9 Sierra Tango Victor. Used as a class N station call sign. 1 BA108
DO9XJZ German class E phonetic spelling example. Spell as Delta Oscar 9 X-ray Juliett Zulu. Used as a class E station call sign. 1 BA109
IG9/DL4HR German station operating with IG9/ prefix in the spelling example. Spell the slash as stroke. Used when a home call is prefixed for operation from another country or area. 1 BA110
DA0ABC German club station example. Recognize it as a club station. Used as a shared club-station call sign. 1 BD101
DA5XX German special experimental-study example. Recognize special experimental-study operation. Used for authorized experimental amateur radio studies. 1 BD102
DL0XK German class A club station example. Recognize a class A club station. Used by a club station in normal or contest operation. 1 BD103
DP0GVN German exterritorial class A station example. Recognize exterritorial class A operation. Used for German amateur operation from an exterritorial site. 1 BD107
DP0POL German exterritorial class A station example. Recognize exterritorial class A operation. Used for German amateur operation from an exterritorial site. 1 BD108
DG2RON/T German training-operation example. Trainee uses DG2RON/T for Morse or digital training. Used when a trainee operates under supervision. 1 BD211
DL0MOL/T Club-station training-operation example. Trainee may use DL0MOL/T or DL0MOL/Trainee. Used for supervised training at a club station. 1 BD210
DL1PZ/Trainee Speech training-operation example. Trainee may use DL1PZ/Trainee. Used for supervised speech-radio training. 1 BD209
DC4LW/mm German maritime-mobile station example. Recognize operation aboard a vessel at sea. Used when operating from a vessel at sea. 1 BD205
VE8ZZ/am Canadian aeronautical-mobile station example. Recognize Canadian aircraft operation. Used when operating an amateur station from an aircraft. 1 BD202
DL/G3MM UK station temporarily operating in Germany. CEPT visitor prefixes home call with German prefix. Used by a foreign operator temporarily in Germany. 1 BD212
HB9/DL9MJ German class A station temporarily in Switzerland. Correct CEPT call-sign form in Switzerland. Used by a German operator temporarily operating from Switzerland. 1 BD214
HB3/DO7PR German CEPT-Novice station temporarily in Switzerland. Correct novice CEPT call-sign form in Switzerland. Used by a German novice operator temporarily operating from Switzerland. 1 BD213
EA6VQ and DF1KW Spanish caller and German answering station. Correct way to answer a CQ call in English. Used when replying directly to a station that called CQ. 1 BE104
4U1ITU ITU station example calling specific prefixes. CQ VK/ZL asks only Australia or New Zealand. Used as a calling station that restricts replies to wanted areas. 1 BE110
N4EAX US station calling Germany. CQ DL means the station seeks a German amateur. Used when a station calls for a particular country prefix. 1 BE113
HB9AFN Swiss station calling DX. CQ DX on 20 m seeks another continent in the exam example. Used when a station requests long-distance or intercontinental replies. 1 BE114
HZ1HZ and K8PYD Station and QSL manager example. QSL via K8PYD means send the card through the QSL manager. Used when a station delegates QSL-card handling to another call sign. 1 BG109
K3LR, W3DZZ, K4EAX Correct USA-only answer set. All three are US call signs. Used as examples of US call-sign prefixes K and W. 1 BD315
W0FKK, N6CAL, VE5VK Mixed USA and Canada distractor set. VE5VK is Canadian, so the set is not USA-only. Used to distinguish US prefixes from Canadian VE. 1 BD315
US2ABC, AB0GC, W4EAX Mixed distractor set. US2ABC is not a US call sign in this question context. Used to avoid assuming every call starting with US means USA. 1 BD315
K1TTT, KA7KLE, UA3RUS Mixed USA and Russia distractor set. UA3RUS is not a US call sign. Used to distinguish US K or KA calls from Russian UA. 1 BD315

Lookup and Identification Rules

Topic What it identifies What the exam tests Explanation, when actually used Exam references Question IDs
International prefix regulation Prefixes for amateur radio call signs. Prefixes are internationally regulated in the Radio Regulations. Used as the legal basis for recognizing country allocations. 1 VA406
Unknown country prefix lookup Where to find an unknown country prefix. Use the ITU country-prefix list, amateur radio handbooks, and call-sign lists. Used when a heard call sign has an unfamiliar prefix. 1 BD301
International callbook Address lookup for foreign amateurs. Foreign addresses can be found in an international callbook or internet sources. Used when sending a direct QSL card. 2 BG109, BG110
QSL-card call signs Minimum QSL-card call-sign data. QSL cards should include own call sign and the other station's call sign. Used to document a completed QSO correctly. 1 BG105
Listening without a call sign Receiving amateur transmissions. Receiving amateur radio transmissions does not require amateur service admission. Used to distinguish SWL reception from transmitting. 1 VD102