224 Phone Number Lookup

Who called from a 224 number? Look up any Illinois phone number for free.

Federal Data Sources

Federal Data

State Data Sources

State Data

County Data Sources

County Data

City Data Sources

City Data

Who Is Calling From Area Code 224?

Northern Chicago suburbs - Evanston, Schaumburg, and Waukegan - fall under the 224 area code, a region packed with major insurance, pharmaceutical, and military institutions. Allstate insurance agents, Walgreens corporate support, AbbVie pharma sales reps, and Naval Station Great Lakes administrators are common callers.

224 Phone Numbers Recently Reported as Spam

224 area code numbers reported as unwanted calls to the FTC in the last 30 days.

Phone Number Complaints Last Reported
(224) 301-9872
143
(224) 301-9934
33
(224) 255-8413
11
(224) 597-0674
5
(224) 665-1347
4
(224) 426-4808
4
(224) 255-8419
4
(224) 568-1395
3
(224) 649-4103
3
(224) 374-1653
3

Common Area Code 224 Phone Scams

The 224 area code is targeted by Social Security suspension threats and student loan forgiveness schemes. Callers promise to erase your debt or fix your social security status in exchange for a fee.

Social Security Number Suspension Threat

Callers claiming to be from the Social Security Administration are targeting 224 area code residents through robocalls and live calls, often speaking with Indian accents. They allege fraudulent or criminal activity on your SSN and threaten immediate legal proceedings or suspension of your number if you don't comply or call back. They warn that legal proceedings are about to begin, threaten to suspend your Social Security number, ask you to provide your full SSN to "verify" your identity, and become flustered or hang up when questioned. They use your SSN to open accounts and commit identity theft. The Social Security Administration does not call people to warn them about legal action or suspend their number. They communicate primarily through U.S. Mail.

"I got a voicemail from this phone number saying they are from Social Security and they are suspending my social security number due to suspicious activity. Anyone else?"

Student Loan Forgiveness Scams

Scammers using names like "Becca Ortiz," "Mia Torres," or "Nadine Smith" are calling area residents about federal student loans. They mention your "prequalified status" is about to change, create urgency by stating that forbearance or relief programs are "about to expire," leave a callback number different from the one they called from, and call even if you have never had a student loan. They use your personal information to apply for fake loan forgiveness programs and steal application fees. Official student loan servicers will not call you with urgent threats about your "prequalified status" expiring.

"I'm not sure if you received a notice that went out recently regarding your student loans, but either way I don't want your prequalified status to change especially the qualifications for forgiveness or possible on discharge so please give me a call when you have a few minutes so I can go over the details with you."

Aggressive Debt Collection Scams

Persistent callers are harassing residents with claims of old or non-existent debt, calling multiple times a day and refusing to identify their company. They call relentlessly, sometimes 5 to 10 times per day, refuse to state their company name without you first providing your SSN, reference debts from over a decade ago like from 2005, and when you call the number back, it says the number is not in service. They use your SSN to access your credit report and steal your identity. Legitimate debt collectors are legally required to identify themselves and their company and must provide you with a written validation notice upon request.

"All they will say is this is an important business matter and we can't give you any information without confirming your social security number at which point I hang up."

Robocalls or live callers are threatening that you will be served with a warrant or legal documents for an unspecified issue. They threaten that a warrant will be issued for your signature, claim a "processor was at the address on file" but was unsuccessful, vaguely mention this is your "final opportunity" for a "voluntary resolution," and mention involvement from federal and local law enforcement including serving you between specific times like "3-5pm tomorrow." They use fear to trick you into paying fake fines or providing personal information over the phone. Real process servers do not call ahead to warn you they are coming. Law enforcement does not call to warn you about an impending warrant.

"Received a call telling that my name has been linked to criminal activity and I must call 224-241-2544 now or I will be served a warrant between 3-5pm tomorrow for my signature. If I am not available the Feds and local sheriff will be involved."

Amazon Purchase Confirmation Scam

You receive a text or call claiming a large purchase has been made on your Amazon account for hundreds of dollars like $568.38 or $892.95. The message provides a toll-free number to call instead of directing you to the official app or website, and includes fake order numbers like #AMZ163229. They use your login or payment information to make real purchases on your account or sell your credentials to other criminals. Amazon will never call or text you to confirm a purchase and ask you to provide information over the phone.

"Your request to process ProductID #AMZ163229 is confirmed, total USD568.38 will be debited from your account. Call AMAZON on 18559515422 if not you."

"Can You Hear Me?" Voice Signature Scam

A caller, sometimes claiming to be from a rewards department or medical service, immediately asks "Can you hear me okay?" The very first thing they ask is "Can you hear me okay?", they hang up immediately after you respond, and the line may have static or seem like a bad connection, prompting you to speak up. They record your "Yes" response and use it as a voice signature to authorize fraudulent charges on your accounts. Legitimate callers will identify themselves and the purpose of their call first.

"Caller said she was calling from rewards department and then immediately asked if I could hear her ok. Dummy me said 'yes'. She then hung up."

Where is area code 224 located?

Area code 224 covers the northeastern part of Illinois and many northern suburbs of Chicago.

Counties Served:

  • Lake County
  • Cook County
  • Kane County
  • McHenry County

Major Cities:

  • Arlington Heights
  • Elgin
  • Evanston
  • Schaumburg
  • Waukegan

Other Cities and Towns:

  • Algonquin
  • Antioch
  • Bannockburn
  • Barrington
  • Barrington Hills
  • Beach Park
  • Buffalo Grove
  • Burlington
  • Carpentersville
  • Cary
  • Channel Lake
  • Deerfield
  • Deer Park
  • Des Plaines
  • East Dundee

Overlay System

Area code 224 is an overlay of area code 847 . This means that both area codes serve the same geographic region. Area code 847 was created on January 20, 1996. Area code 224 was assigned on January 5, 2002. Ten-digit dialing is required in all affected communities.

FAQs About 224 Phone Numbers

Is area code 224 a scam?

No, 224 is a legitimate Illinois area code serving the northern Chicago suburbs, including Elgin and Arlington Heights. The affluent suburban location gives the prefix credibility with recipients who associate the area with business and finance.

Why do I get spam calls from area code 224?

Social Security suspension robocalls with callers posing as federal agents are the highest-volume complaint. Fake legal action calls promising service between specific hours, Amazon purchase confirmation texts citing specific dollar amounts, and aggressive debt collection calls demanding SSN verification are routinely reported.