US Reverse Phone Lookup

Find out who called from an unknown number using our US phone number lookup service. This free reverse phone lookup tool works with landline, cell phone, and VoIP numbers. Covers all 50 states.

Results may include:

  • Owner name and address
  • Location based on area code
  • Spam and scam reports by users

Our database contains over 25 million Do Not Call and robocall complaints reported to the FTC.

Federal Data Sources

Federal Data

State Data Sources

State Data

County Data Sources

County Data

City Data Sources

City Data

Phone Number Lookup Results May Provide

Caller ID lookup results vary based on phone type and country and data availability:

Owner's Name

Full name of the person or business

Full Address

Street, city, state, and ZIP code

Spam Report

Do Not Call and robocall complaints

Phone Type

Mobile, landline, or VoIP

Carrier Information

Original service provider

Geographic Location

Originally assigned region

Premium Services From Our Partners May Also Include:

Social Media

Social accounts, dating profiles, or photos

Owner Details

Phone owner age or email addresses

Reverse Phone Lookup Use Cases

Getting calls from numbers you don't recognize? Whether you're trying to identify who's calling you, block spam calls, or verify if a number is legitimate, reverse call lookup gives you answers. Here are the most common reasons people search phone numbers:

Identify Unknown Callers

Stop wondering "who called me from this number?". Our reverse phone search service helps reveal who the real phone number owner is, so you can decide if it's safe to answer or call back.

Stop Spam and Robocalls

Check any suspicious number against our spam database before you pick up. See if others have reported it as a telemarketer, robocaller, or spam number. Consider blocking unwanted calls to protect your peace of mind.

Verify Caller Identity to Avoid Scams

Don't trust caller ID alone. Scammers can fake the number that appears on your screen. If someone claims to be from your bank, the IRS, or a delivery service, look up their number first to confirm it's real and avoid fraud.

Check If a Number Is Safe

Before returning a missed call or responding to a text, use our phone number lookup to see who it belongs to. Find out if it's a legitimate business, a personal contact, or a known scam operation.

Verify Old Contact Information

Have an old phone number for someone? Check if it's still active and confirm it still belongs to the person you're trying to reach before calling or texting.

Investigate Suspicious Text Messages

Got a text from an unknown number asking you to click a link or send money? Look up the number to see who's really behind the message and protect yourself from phishing attempts and scams.

Reverse Phone Lookup by State

Look up phone numbers by state to find available owner name and address records across all 50 US states. Plus you'll get access to Do Not Call and robocall complaints from Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to help protect yourself from local scammers and robocallers.

Alabama

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Alaska

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Arizona

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Arkansas

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California

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Colorado

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Connecticut

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Delaware

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Washington D.C.

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Florida

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Georgia

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Hawaii

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Idaho

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Illinois

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Indiana

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Iowa

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Kansas

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Kentucky

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Louisiana

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Maine

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Maryland

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Massachusetts

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Michigan

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Minnesota

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Mississippi

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Missouri

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Montana

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Nebraska

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Nevada

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New Hampshire

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New Jersey

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New Mexico

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New York

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North Carolina

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North Dakota

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Ohio

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Oklahoma

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Oregon

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Pennsylvania

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Puerto Rico

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Rhode Island

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South Carolina

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South Dakota

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Tennessee

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Texas

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Utah

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Vermont

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Virginia

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Washington

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West Virginia

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Wisconsin

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Wyoming

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Why People Use Reverse Phone Lookup in the US

The US has roughly 471 million active phone numbers. About 388 million of those are mobile, 65 million are VoIP, and 18 million traditional landlines. The three biggest carriers alone (Verizon with 146 million customers, T-Mobile with 131 million, and AT&T with 118 million as of Q1 2025) cover the vast majority of wireless subscribers.

With that many numbers in circulation, and over 2 million unwanted call complaints filed in 2024, people have plenty of reasons to look up who's calling. Here are the five most common ones.

1. Identifying unknown callers

Most people start with something simple: a missed call from a number they don't recognize. Since mobile numbers don't appear in public directories the way landlines used to, there's no phone book to flip through. A reverse lookup is often the quickest way to match an unknown number to a name or business.

This matters more now than it did a decade ago. According to the FCC's Voice Telephone Services Report, mobile subscriptions grew from about 378 million in mid-2023 to 388 million by mid-2024, while landlines fell from 22 million to 18 million over the same period. The shift means fewer numbers are publicly listed, and more callers are effectively anonymous without a lookup tool.

2. Screening spam and robocalls

The National Do Not Call Registry recorded about 2.09 million unwanted call complaints in 2024. The breakdown:

  • Robocalls: 1,099,223 complaints (52.7%)
  • Live callers: 763,970 complaints (36.7%)
  • Unspecified: 221,940 complaints (10.6%)

Before picking up or returning a call, a quick lookup can tell you whether the number has already been flagged as spam. That one step can spare you from fake warranty pitches, bogus charity solicitations, and the rest of the junk call pile.

You can register your number at donotcall.gov or by calling 1-888-382-1222 from the phone you want to protect. To check whether a specific number has been already reported to FTC, visit reportedcalls.com.

3. Verifying businesses or service providers

Someone calls claiming to represent your bank, a government agency, or a service provider. Is it real? The FTC's 2024 data puts hard numbers on this problem: phone calls accounted for 19% of all fraud reports (284,659 reports and $948 million in losses), while text messages made up another 16% (246,784 reports, $470 million in losses). The median loss per victim was $1,500 for phone scams and $1,000 for text scams.

Common examples include fake IRS agents demanding immediate payment, bogus bank fraud departments asking for account details, phony utility companies threatening disconnection, and the ever-present vehicle warranty extensions.

A reverse lookup can show whether the calling number actually belongs to the business it claims to be. For deeper verification, a few databases help:

Using a reverse lookup alongside these resources gives you a much clearer picture of whether a company is legitimate.

4. Safety and personal security

Phone fraud is expensive. Americans lost a combined $1.4 billion to phone and text scams in 2024, and over 531,000 people were victimized. Phone calls are especially effective for scammers: they have a 19% success rate, compared to just 11% for email. Put differently, about 1 in 5 people who engage with a scam call end up losing money.

People use reverse lookups to check numbers tied to suspicious texts, repeated unwanted calls, or possible harassment. Knowing who owns a number can help you decide whether to respond, block, or report it.

If you've lost money to a phone scam or believe you've been targeted, you can file a report at reportfraud.ftc.gov. Every report helps the FTC track fraud patterns and build cases against scam operations.

5. Reconnecting with lost contacts

Sometimes the goal isn't safety but simply finding someone again. The US has about 331 million people and over 8.2 million businesses, so a phone number alone doesn't always get you far. But a reverse lookup can confirm whether a number is still active and who it's registered to.

Social media can fill in the gaps. You can visit the Facebook or LinkedIn directories to search by name if the number gives you a lead. Combining a phone lookup with these searches improves your chances of actually reaching the right person.

What a US Phone Number Can (and Can't) Tell You

United States phone numbers follow a 10-digit format: +1 NPA-NXX-XXXX (administered by NANPA):

  • +1 is the country code for the United States.
  • NPA (area code) tells you the geographic region or state where the number was originally assigned.
  • NXX (central office code) narrows it down to a specific city or neighborhood and identifies the original service provider.
  • XXXX (line number) is the individual subscriber's number within that local exchange.

Our reverse lookup matches these pieces against regional assignment data to figure out where a call is coming from, down to specific cities and counties.

What this data reveals

Location (sort of). Area codes and rate center assignments give you a general geographic area. But thousands-block pooling means numbers sharing the same NXX code might actually serve different areas within the same rate center. So the precision isn't great.

Carrier (sort of). Operating Company Numbers (OCNs) are four-character codes that link phone numbers to their service providers. But again, thousands-block pooling muddies things up, since multiple OCNs can be associated with a single NXX code.

Why lookups aren't always accurate

  • Thousands-block pooling makes carrier assignments within shared NXX codes ambiguous
  • Number portability means the current carrier can be completely different from the original one on record
  • VoIP services break all the old geographic assumptions
  • Non-geographic services make location-based identification unreliable

Why use ThisNumber for Reverse Phone Lookup?

Here's why thousands of users choose ThisNumber over Spokeo, BeenVerified, or WhitePages:

100% Free

No credit card required, no hidden fees, no subscription traps. We show you all available public phone records at no charge. Our service is supported by ads and affiliate partnerships, so you get real results without paying a dime.

Privacy First

We comply with CCPA/CPRA, TCPA, and FCRA privacy laws. All data comes exclusively from official US government databases where businesses are legally required to register. We don't store your search history and respect your right to opt-out.

Millions of Phone Records

Our database includes over 18 million US phone number records with detailed owner name and address information. More records means better chances of identifying that mystery caller.

Spam and Scam Identification

See if a number has been reported for spam, robocalls, or scams. We show the number of Do Not Call and robocall complaints reported to FTC, so you know what you're dealing with before you answer.

Official Sources

We pull data from official US government databases including business licenses, professional registrations, and contractor permits, so you get information you can trust.

Is it Legal to Do Reverse Phone Lookup in the US?

Whether a reverse phone lookup is legal depends on what kind of information you're getting and what you plan to do with it.

The short answer

Looking up publicly available info (name and address, similar to what you'd find in a phone directory) to identify an unknown caller is generally legal.

Using a service that compiles and sells detailed personal data that would qualify as a "consumer report" under the FCRA is a different story. That's only legal if you have a "permissible purpose" as the law defines it.

The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)

The FCRA is the main law here. Whether your search is legal comes down to whether the service counts as a "consumer reporting agency" and whether the data it gives you counts as a "consumer report."

What counts as a consumer report? Under Section 603(d), it's any communication from a consumer reporting agency about a person's creditworthiness, credit standing, credit capacity, character, general reputation, personal characteristics, or mode of living—if it's collected or used for decisions about credit, insurance, employment, or similar purposes. It's broader than just credit reports.

Permissible purposes. Section 604 lists the specific reasons you can legally access a consumer report:

  • Credit transactions involving the consumer
  • Employment purposes (with the consumer's consent)
  • Insurance underwriting
  • Court orders or subpoenas
  • Legitimate business needs tied to a consumer-initiated transaction

Using a service that provides consumer reports just because you're curious about someone, or to check up on a date or a neighbor, is illegal and can lead to civil liability.

Phone Number Search Limitations

  • Number Portability. Federal regulations let people keep their phone numbers when they move cities or change service providers, meaning the location information you find might be outdated.
  • Internet-Based Phone Services (VoIP). These services can assign any area code to a number regardless where someone actually lives, making it nearly impossible to determine their true location since calls route through the internet.
  • Mobile Phones. Unlike traditional landlines, cell phones don't have much publicly available information. Someone can get a number with one city's area code and move anywhere the next day.
  • Business Phone Lines. Companies frequently use numbers from multiple area codes or virtual numbers for their operations, which don't reflect actual physical locations.
  • Recently Reassigned Numbers. When phone numbers get recycled and given to new users, lookup results might still show the previous owner's details instead of current information.
  • Caller ID Spoofing. Caller ID spoofing occurs when scammers falsify caller ID information to disguise their identity. Scammers frequently spoof numbers with similar area code and even your exchange (first 6 digits) to appear as a "neighbor" calling. This technique increases answer rates.
  • Outdated Information. Data can become inaccurate quickly due to people moving, changing carriers, or numbers being reassigned to new users.

Data Accuracy & Availability

Transparency about what you can expect from our records.

  • Data accuracy varies, public records information may be outdated or not accurate.
  • We respect the right to opt-out, privacy protected numbers won't appear in results.
  • Recent phone number changes may not yet be reflected in our database.
  • Records display only available information; some details may be incomplete or unavailable.

Permitted and Prohibited Uses

Reverse phone lookup results are subject to the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA).

Permitted Uses

  • Personal safety and identifying unknown callers
  • Verifying business contact information before engaging
  • Fraud prevention and caller verification
  • Reconnecting with lost contacts
  • Investigating harassment or threatening calls

Prohibited Uses

  • Employment screening or background checks for hiring
  • Credit decisions or loan approvals
  • Insurance underwriting or rate setting
  • Rental or housing purchase decisions
  • Any use as a "consumer report" under the FCRA