Bruker bemerker: Telemarketing, typisk, hehe.
Reverse Phone Lookup in Norway — Recent Community Reports
Check unknown Norwegian numbers with recent reports (Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim, Stavanger) and share your experience.
Unknown calls in Norway
Unsure about a Norwegian number? Review concise reports to judge calls and texts. Around Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim and Stavanger you’ll see both legitimate callbacks (deliveries, banking, appointments) and waves of robocalls or phishing. Prefixes such as 21/22/23 (Oslo), 55 (Bergen), 73 (Trondheim) and mobile ranges (4x/9x) don’t reliably prove location or identity due to portability and VoIP — consider them context, not proof.
Verification: call back via the official number on the company website/app, check in‑app notices, and never share one‑time codes by phone. Use device/carrier tools to block repeat issues and leave a short, factual note here so others can benefit from your experience.
Bruker klassifiserer: Telemarketing
Bruker advarer: Vær oppmerksom, ok? – men.
Bruker advarer: Forsiktighet
Bruker advarer: Forsiktighet
Bruker bemerker: Irriterende
Ifølge innspill: Telemarketing, sånn, typisk.
Ifra brukeren: Hold deg på vakt, hør her – yeah.
Bruker oppgir: Bra
Blokkert allerede
User mentions: Annoying
Trivelig
Bedrageri
Byen Hamar
Bruker rapporterer: positivt
Unngå å svare – dyrt forbrukslån blir tilbudt!
Mange vedvarende SMS-er.
Kjent svindler Stian Myklebust.
Bruker informerer: Dette er svindel
En stor svindler holder seg langt unna.
Trending Phone Numbers
FAQ — Norway
How to verify callers in Norway?
Call via the official number listed on the company website/app; avoid calling back the unknown number.
Do prefixes prove location?
No. Portability/VoIP make 21/22/23/55/73 and 4x/9x ranges unreliable for location or identity.
Common patterns?
Delivery and appointment updates, bank callbacks, 2FA codes; plus robocalls and parcel/account phishing.
What should a good report include?
Caller type, purpose, date/time, and cues that helped your decision.