Morse Code Numbers Explained
Numbers have a beautiful logic in Morse code — each digit is exactly five symbols, sweeping from all dots to all dashes.
Numbers have a beautiful logic in Morse code, and a morse code translator numbers feature makes them easy to convert. Each digit is exactly five symbols, sweeping from all dots to all dashes. Type any figure into our Morse code translator to see it.
How the digits work
Whether you use a morse code number translator, a number morse code translator, or type numbers in morse code translator input, the pattern is the same: 1 is ·−−−−, 5 is ·····, and 0 is −−−−−. A morse code translator number lookup is handy for dates, coordinates and codes.
Binary and puzzles
Sometimes people want a morse code binary translator to combine Morse with 1s and 0s for puzzles; the same dot-dash logic applies once you map the symbols.
See them in context
See every digit alongside the letters on the alphabet & numbers chart, or practise them inside real words & phrases. Just starting out? Our learning guide shows how to lock the patterns in.
Keep exploring MorseTranslateCode: try the translator, study the Morse code alphabet, follow our learning guide, browse more on the blog, or read about us.
Try it now
Open the free Morse code translator, type a message, and hear it in dots and dashes — no sign-up.
Frequently asked questions
Every digit is five symbols long. A morse code number translator maps 1 to one dot and four dashes, 5 to five dots, and 0 to five dashes, sweeping between the two.
Yes — type any mix of digits and text and the numbers in morse code translator handles both at once.
Convert text to Morse in one tap
Type any message, hear the audio, flash it, or copy the code — all free in the translator.
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