Who's really calling you?

Enter any phone number. We flag scam-prone country codes, premium-rate numbers that bill you for calling back, fake bank shortcodes and numbers already reported in scams.

Free · No signup · The result gets a shareable link

01How it works

01

Paste it

A link, a phone number, an email or an IBAN — whatever you were sent.

02

We cross-check it

Security blocklists, domain age, SSL, scam-prone prefixes and our own scam-report history — in parallel, in seconds.

03

You get a verdict

A clear risk score with the exact red flags, plus an optional AI deep-dive. Share the report link with whoever needs convincing.

02What a phone number reveals

The prefix tells us a lot: country codes heavily used by romance, 419 and "pig-butchering" crypto scam networks; French premium-rate prefixes (089x) that charge you just for calling back; and short sender codes that pretend to be your bank. We also search Digiscam's scan history — if that number appeared in messages our AI flagged as scams, you'll see how many times.

03The one-ring callback trap

A missed call from an unknown international number, one single ring — that's "wangiri" fraud. The scammer wants you to call back a number that bills by the minute. If the number starts with a country code you have no contacts in, or a premium prefix, don't call back. Check it here first: it takes five seconds and costs nothing.

04The number looks local? It can still be fake

Caller ID can be spoofed: scammers routinely display your bank's real number while calling from abroad. The rule that never fails: your bank will never ask for your full card number, PIN or a one-time code by phone. Hang up and call back the official number printed on your card — never the number that called you.

05Frequently asked questions

Can you tell me the name of who called?

No — we're not a phone directory and we don't hold subscriber identities. What we tell you is the risk: scam-prone origin, premium-rate billing, fake-bank shortcode patterns, and whether the number already appeared in scams reported to Digiscam.

The number called once and hung up. Should I call back?

Check it first. One-ring calls from unknown international numbers are usually "wangiri" fraud designed to make you dial a premium number. If the report shows a high-risk country code or premium prefix, don't call back.

The caller ID showed my bank's real number. How?

Caller ID spoofing is cheap and common. Scammers display any number they want, including your bank's. Treat the conversation, not the number, as the test: real banks never ask for PINs, full card numbers or one-time codes.

Is checking a number legal? Is it stored?

Yes, it's legal — we analyse the number itself, not its owner. Reports for numbers with no risk signals stay out of search engines, and you can email hello@digiscam.com to request removal of any page.

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