No answer
Who Called Me in the United States — Reverse Lookup & Latest Reports
Look up US phone numbers with recent community reports. Spot patterns across New York, Los Angeles, Miami, San Francisco and more, and share your experience.
Understand US caller patterns
Unfamiliar US number? Here you can review fresh, concise reports from the community and decide how to handle the next call or text. In metropolitan areas like New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami or San Francisco, you’ll often see mixed patterns: legitimate callbacks (banks, deliveries, appointments) alongside unwanted robocalls or phishing. Area codes such as 212, 310, 305, 415 and 646 no longer guarantee location due to number portability and VoIP — treat them as context, not proof.
Best practice: call back via the official number listed on the company website/app, check in‑app notices, and never share one‑time codes by phone. If you notice recurring issues, use your device and carrier tools (e.g., Verizon, AT&T, T‑Mobile) to block or filter, and add a short factual note here so others benefit from your experience.
A marketing call promoting a new app. It was polite but I’m not interested at the moment.
Got an unsolicited call promoting a weight‑loss program. Hard sell advertising.
An advertising call promoting a service I hadn't heard of. It was brief and not overly aggressive.
Another ad call, this time about a streaming service trial—nothing special.
A caller requested my phone number, insisting I possessed their wallet, which I don't.
The call contained no audible content.
Scam call about a fake charity donation. I won't be supporting this.
Phishing attempt via phone, trying to verify my social security number. Ignore.
No audio detected during the call.
Ring without answer
They called to push a product I hadn't heard of; seemed like a typical advertising spam.
Fraud
Got a call from an ad agency that sounded scripted—nothing special, just another sales pitch.
Advertising call that was overly enthusiastic about a service I never use.
Received a pushy advertising call; not interested.
Calls go unanswered yet they persist, demanding I input information to locate an account I’m unaware of.
Random ad call about a new phone plan. Not interested, just a waste of time.
Automated call promoting a fraudulent loan scheme.
Aggressive debt collector call for a debt I don't recognize—very unsettling.
Trending Phone Numbers
FAQ — United States
How do I verify who called?
Don’t return calls via the same unknown number. Instead, call the official number from the company’s site/app and check for in‑app alerts or emails.
Do area codes prove location?
No. Number portability and VoIP mean area codes (e.g., 212, 310, 305, 415, 646) are not reliable evidence of where a caller is.
What patterns are common?
Delivery confirmations, bank callbacks and 2FA codes, plus waves of robocalls, investment schemes, tech‑support impersonation and prize scams.
What should I share in a report?
Keep it short and practical: caller type, purpose, date, and any cues that helped you decide to answer, ignore or block.