The number 0 is the “all-dashes” anchor in Morse numbers. It’s long, steady, and unmistakable once your ear learns the five-beat dash rhythm. If you’re decoding real transmissions (or using a translator tool), 0 is one of those patterns you want to recognize instantly because it shows up in dates, prices, coordinates, and IDs.
People often search for things like:
- What is 0 in Morse code?
- How do you write the number 0 in Morse?
- What number is —– in Morse code?
- How long is 0 in Morse code?
- How do you separate numbers in Morse code?
This page gives you the exact 0 pattern, timing rules, how to avoid common mix-ups, and drills to make it automatic.
Quick Answer: What Is 0 in Morse Code?
The number 0 in Morse code is:
0 = —–
That means:
dash – dash – dash – dash – dash
In sound form:
dah – dah – dah – dah – dah
How to Write 0 in Morse Code (Timing)
Global timing rules:
- Dot = 1 time unit
- Dash = 3 time units
- Gap inside the same character = 1 unit
- Gap between characters = 3 units
- Gap between words = 7 units
For 0 = —–:
- Dash (3)
- internal gap (1)
- Dash (3)
- internal gap (1)
- Dash (3)
- internal gap (1)
- Dash (3)
- internal gap (1)
- Dash (3)
- then a 3-unit pause before the next character
Why it feels “long”: 0 has five dashes, so it’s one of the longest number characters to send and hear.
Why 0 Is Important
- It’s common in years (2020, 2030), money, measurements, and serial numbers.
- It trains your ear to tolerate long dash sequences without drifting.
- It helps you master the “numbers logic” in Morse: 6–0 are dash-led patterns.
0 vs Similar Patterns
Common comparisons:
- 0 = —–
- T = – (single dash)
- O = — (three dashes)
Key difference: 0 is five dashes, not one or three. If you’re hearing “it just keeps going,” you’re probably in 0 territory.
Practical Examples with 0
- “10”
- 1 = .—-
- 0 = —–
- 10 = .—- —–
- “2025”
- 2 = ..—
- 0 = —–
- 2 = ..—
- 5 = …..
- 2025 = ..— —– ..— …..
Mini Training: Lock In 0 (—–)
- Decode
Look at: —– → say “0” instantly. - Encode
Think “0” → send five clean dashes with tight 1-unit gaps. - Contrast set
- (T)
- — (O)
- —– (0)
Ask: “How many dashes did I actually hear?”