Access to Emergency Services
The Body of European Regulators for Electronic Communications (BEREC) should establish and maintain a single Union wide database of means of access to emergency services that are mandated and are technically feasible to be used by roaming end users in all Member States. Such a database would help national operators, national regulatory authorities and, where applicable, other competent authorities to be informed of all the means of access to emergency services deployed within the Union.
| Country Ordina in modo discendente | Means of Access | Description | Download Link | Additional Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Denmark | Emergency calls (voice) | 112 Emergency calls (voice) for reaching Police, Fire brigade and Ambulance | https://www.brs.dk/en/what-you-can-do/in-case-of-an-emergency/1-1-2-and-other-useful-phone-numbers/ | |
| Estonia | Emergency Calls (Voice) | 112 European emergency number | In addition to 112 domestic numbers, the Emergency Centre has an emergency number 6000112, which can be called from outside Estonia. | |
| Estonia | Emergency Calls (Voice) | The Emergency Centre also operates a 24/7 national information telephone number 1247, which offers information and advice in situations where life, health and property are not at risk. | This short number also has a long number 6001247 for calling from abroad. | |
| Finland | Emergency applications | 112 Suomi application allows users to make emergency voice calls. | https://112.fi/en/112-suomi-application | |
| Finland | Messaging | Available for all user groups with Finnish mobile connections, roaming access under development |