Welcome to the command center for Morse Code numbers.
If you’ve ever asked Google things like:
- “What is 1 in Morse code?”
- “How do you separate numbers in Morse?”
- “Is 0 the same as O?”
Congratulations. You’ve just landed on the page that answers everything, all in one place.
This is the 0–9 Hub:
Every digit. Every pattern. Every rule you actually need.
Short. Sharp. Straight to decoding.
Let’s make you fluent.
What Are the Morse Code Numbers?
Morse numbers are the digits 0–9 represented by a mix of dots (.) and dashes (-). The best part: every digit uses exactly 5 signals, which makes the system insanely consistent once you see the pattern.
Below is the definitive 0–9 table. Click any number to learn: examples, timing, and exercises.
| Number | Morse | Learn More |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | —– | 0 in Morse Code → |
| 1 | .—- | 1 in Morse Code → |
| 2 | ..— | 2 in Morse Code → |
| 3 | …– | 3 in Morse Code → |
| 4 | ….- | 4 in Morse Code → |
| 5 | ….. | 5 in Morse Code → |
| 6 | -…. | 6 in Morse Code → |
| 7 | –… | 7 in Morse Code → |
| 8 | —.. | 8 in Morse Code → |
| 9 | —-. | 9 in Morse Code → |
How Morse Numbers Work (The Pattern That Makes It Easy)
Numbers are built like a ladder:
1 to 5: add dots from the left, then fill the rest with dashes
- 1 = .—-
- 2 = ..—
- 3 = …–
- 4 = ….-
- 5 = …..
6 to 0: add dashes from the left, then fill the rest with dots
- 6 = -….
- 7 = –…
- 8 = —..
- 9 = —-.
- 0 = —–
Once you learn that, you stop “memorizing” and start recognizing.
How to Write Numbers in Morse Code
Rules You’ll Remember in 60 Seconds
Dots vs Dashes
- Dot = short tap
- Dash = 3× longer tap
The Golden Timing Formula
| Action | Timing |
|---|---|
| Dot | 1 time unit |
| Dash | 3 time units |
| Between dots/dashes in the same number | 1 unit |
| Between numbers (and letters) | 3 units |
| Between words | 7 units |
This answers:
- How long is each number in Morse code?
- How do you know when a number ends?
- How to separate numbers in Morse code?
Short vibe:
Inside the digit = tight
Between characters = mini pause
Between words = noticeable pause
High-Intent Quick Answers (with Deep Links)
Searchers want fast. We deliver:
What is 0 in Morse code?
0 = —–
What is 1 in Morse code?
1 = .—-
What is 2 in Morse code?
2 = ..—
What is 3 in Morse code?
3 = …–
What is 4 in Morse code?
4 = ….-
What is 5 in Morse code?
5 = …..
What is 6 in Morse code?
6 = -….
What is 7 in Morse code?
7 = –…
What is 8 in Morse code?
8 = —..
What is 9 in Morse code?
9 = —-.
0 vs O (The Classic Confusion)
“Is 0 the same as O in Morse code?”
Nope.
- 0 = —– (five dashes)
- O = — (three dashes)
If you count the dashes and keep timing clean, you’ll never mix them up again.
1 vs J (The Sneaky One)
- 1 = .—-
- J = .—
If you drop one dash from 1, it collapses into J. This is why “all numbers = 5 signals” is a rule worth locking in early.
Decode This: What Number Is …– ?
Pattern: …–
The number is: 3
Quick Decode Drills
Let’s make your brain click faster:
Try these:
- Decode: —-.
- Decode: -….
- Write number 0
- Separate these cleanly: 12 34
- Decode: …..
Soon you’ll read numbers without even thinking.