Bruger angiver: Andet.
Reverse Phone Lookup in Denmark — Recent Community Reports
Check unknown Danish numbers with recent reports (Copenhagen, Aarhus, Odense, Aalborg) and share your experience.
Unknown calls in Denmark
Unsure about a Danish number? Explore concise community notes to judge unfamiliar calls or texts. In Copenhagen, Aarhus, Odense and Aalborg you’ll see both legitimate callbacks (deliveries, banking, appointments) and waves of robocalls or phishing. Denmark uses eight‑digit numbers without visible area codes; historic patterns (e.g., 33 in Copenhagen) and mobile ranges (20/30/40/50) are not reliable proof of identity or location due to portability and VoIP — treat them as context.
Verification: return calls via the official number on the company website/app, check in‑app notices, and never share one‑time codes by phone. Use device and carrier filters (e.g., 70 shared‑cost, 80 toll‑free) for repeat issues, and leave a short, factual note to help others.
En kunstig intelligens er den, som taler
Ønsker at trække penge fra dit kort.
Falsk person
Nummeret er ukendt
Ifølge brugeren: Dårlig
Bruger rapporterer: God og sikker
Bruger anbefaler forsigtighed
Dette er et phishing-forsøg.
Politi‑fup
Falsk
Ifølge indberetningen er nummeret dårligt, haha
Hører til Bandorist
Man lægger bare på
Brugerens note: Irriterende.
Brugeren beskriver: Irriterende
Vær forsigtig
Bruger angiver både dårlig kvalitet og advarsel
Dette er knyttet til Falck.
Det drejer sig om tricktyveri.
Trending Phone Numbers
FAQ — Denmark
How to verify callers in Denmark?
Use the official number from the company site/app and check in‑app messages; avoid calling back the unknown number.
Do prefixes prove location?
No. Denmark’s portability and VoIP mean prefixes/ranges are not reliable evidence.
Common patterns?
Delivery updates, bank callbacks, 2FA codes; robocalls, parcel/account phishing, scripted sales pitches.
What to include in a report?
Caller type, purpose, date/time, and cues that guided your decision.