Italy Phone Number Lookup - Find Who's Calling You
Italy Phone Number Lookup
Identify unknown calls, spam numbers, and business callers in Italy using community reports.
Most Reported Spam Numbers in Italy – Last 7 Days
Live database of Italy's most active spam landline numbers, scam callers, and unwanted telemarketers reported by users in the past week. Identify, verify, and block suspicious +39 phone numbers before they reach you.
Recent Reports About Phone Numbers in Italy
Community-verified reports from Italy users
Scam call. Block the prefix +39027925*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39027925*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39027925*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39027925*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39027925*
Scam call Block the prefix +39027925*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39039274*
Other
Scam call. Block the prefix +390111951*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39059293*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39059293*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39051091*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39051091*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39051091*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39051067*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39068045*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39051067*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39068045*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39068045*
Scam call. Block the prefix +39068045*
Report a Phone Number
Help others by sharing your experience with unknown callers
Whose Number Is This in Italy?
Italy has a structured AGCOM numbering plan where the first digit gives an important clue about the service: 0 for geographic landlines, 3 for mobile and personal services, 5 for nomadic telephone services, 8 for toll-free, shared-cost and premium service families, and 1 for short public-service and emergency numbers.
WhoseNo helps Italian users combine those numbering clues with community spam reports. You can quickly distinguish a likely mobile caller, a Milan or Rome fixed-line number, a 55 nomadic/VoIP service, an 800 toll-free line, or a higher-risk 89X premium-rate service before deciding whether to answer, block, or report the number.
Common Spam Call Types
in Italy
- Bank, Poste Italiane, or payment-card impersonation calls asking for OTPs
- Aggressive energy, gas, broadband, or insurance teleselling
- Fake courier, customs-fee, or missed-delivery calls and follow-up smishing
- Investment, trading, forex, or crypto pitches from spoofed Italian numbers
- Premium-rate callback traps involving 892, 894, 895, or 899 numbers
How to Identify Scam
Numbers
- Caller claims urgency or threatens consequences
- Requests personal info, PINs, or OTP codes
- Offers that sound too good to be true
- Unknown numbers calling repeatedly
Are Unknown Calls Always
Dangerous?
Not all unknown calls are harmful. Many legitimate callers include:
- Delivery services confirming orders
- Banks calling for legitimate verification
- Healthcare clinics and appointment centers
- Couriers and delivery companies
- Banks calling through official published numbers
- Public administration or customer-care short codes
Italy Numbering and Telecom Reference
This reference combines WhoseNo user reports with official AGCOM and MIMIT numbering guidance for Italian mobile, fixed-line, nomadic, toll-free, shared-cost, premium-rate, emergency, and public-service number families.
Italy Number Formats
Italy uses country code +39 and an open national numbering plan. Geographic fixed-line numbers keep the leading 0 as part of the number, including in international format.
- Country calling code: +39
- No separate domestic trunk prefix for ordinary geographic numbers; the leading 0 is part of the Italian number.
- Geographic fixed-line examples: +39 06 XXXX XXXX for Rome, +39 02 XXXX XXXX for Milan, +39 011 XXX XXXX for Turin.
- Mobile and personal services: numbers starting with 3, commonly written as +39 3XX XXX XXXX.
- Nomadic telephone / VoIP services: 55X-style 10-digit numbers.
- Toll-free services: 800 and 803 families.
- Shared-cost services: 840, 841, 847, and 848 families.
- Premium-rate services: 892, 893, 894, 895, 899, and 89111 service families.
- Emergency and public-service numbers include 112, 113, 114, 115, 118, 1515, 1522, and 1530.
For Italian landlines, do not drop the leading 0 when converting to +39 format. A Rome number written domestically as 06... remains +39 06... internationally.
AGCOM Service Families
AGCOM organizes the national numbering plan by the first digit so users and operators can recognize the service type before a call is placed or returned.
| Leading digit / family | Primary service meaning | Lookup note |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | Geographic fixed-line numbers | Area code and subscriber number; leading 0 stays in international format. |
| 1 | Short numbers, emergency services, public utility services, and some premium-rate short services | Use caution with unfamiliar short codes unless the service is known. |
| 3 | Mobile and personal communication services | Prefix confirms mobile/personal family, not the current carrier after portability. |
| 4 | Internal network services and SMS/MMS/data service numbers | Mostly operator or service-specific usage rather than ordinary voice callers. |
| 5 | Nomadic telephone communication services | Often used for VoIP or location-independent voice services. |
| 7 | Internet access and mobile/personal routing codes | Mostly technical, dial-up, or routing use. |
| 8 | Toll-free, shared-cost, and premium-rate service families | Check the exact 8XX/89X family before calling back. |
| 9 | Reserved for future needs | Ordinary Italian subscriber numbers should not start with 9. |
Major Mobile Operators
AGCOM's September 2025 mobile market snapshot shows these main operator groups by total SIM share. Shares are useful market context, but they do not identify the current carrier of an individual number.
| Operator group / brand | Total SIM share in AGCOM Sep. 2025 snapshot | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Fastweb+Vodafone | 29.9% | AGCOM reports Fastweb+Vodafone as the largest total-SIM group; figures include Vodafone-related subsidiary lines such as ho. Mobile/VEI. |
| TIM | 25.9% | AGCOM data includes TIM subsidiary Kena Mobile lines. |
| WINDTRE | 24.1% | Major mobile network operator and host network for several brands. |
| Iliad | 11.2% | Major mobile network operator with growing human-SIM share. |
| PostePay / PosteMobile | 4.0% | Large MVNO/mobile service brand. |
| CoopVoce | 2.1% | MVNO brand included separately in AGCOM market data. |
| Lycamobile | 0.9% | MVNO brand included separately in AGCOM market data. |
| Others | 2.0% | Includes smaller MVNOs and service providers. |
Portability and Carrier Verification
A 3XX prefix can identify an Italian mobile/personal number family, but it cannot prove the current live network.
- MIMIT maintains the centralized numbering database for fixed, non-geographic, and mobile resources assigned to operators.
- MIMIT also maintains number-portability data for fixed and mobile transfers through NPTS / DB MNP workflows used by operators.
- For public lookup pages, treat prefixes as line-type hints and avoid claiming a definitive current carrier from the prefix alone.
- If a caller claims to be from a bank, utility, courier, public body, or telecom operator, verify through the official published contact number or app.
Common Geographic Area Codes
Italian fixed-line area codes are part of the number and remain after +39. The examples below cover common city prefixes users are likely to search.
| Area code | City / area | Example international form |
|---|---|---|
| 06 | Rome | +39 06 ... |
| 02 | Milan | +39 02 ... |
| 011 | Turin | +39 011 ... |
| 010 | Genoa | +39 010 ... |
| 081 | Naples | +39 081 ... |
| 051 | Bologna | +39 051 ... |
| 055 | Florence | +39 055 ... |
| 041 | Venice / Mestre | +39 041 ... |
| 045 | Verona | +39 045 ... |
| 049 | Padua | +39 049 ... |
| 080 | Bari | +39 080 ... |
| 091 | Palermo | +39 091 ... |
| 095 | Catania | +39 095 ... |
| 070 | Cagliari | +39 070 ... |
| 030 | Brescia | +39 030 ... |
| 035 | Bergamo | +39 035 ... |
| 040 | Trieste | +39 040 ... |
| 071 | Ancona | +39 071 ... |
| 075 | Perugia | +39 075 ... |
Special and Higher-Risk Number Families
Non-geographic service numbers can be legitimate, but some families deserve extra caution before calling back.
| Number family | Service type | Caller-safety note |
|---|---|---|
| 800 / 803 | Toll-free services | Often used by businesses and public services, but verify unexpected support calls through official channels. |
| 840 / 841 / 847 / 848 | Shared-cost services | Caller may pay setup or duration-based charges depending on the exact service. |
| 178 / 199 | Unique or personal number services | Non-geographic personal/business reachability services. |
| 55 | Nomadic telephone / VoIP services | May be used by hosted business voice services and call centers. |
| 892 / 893 | Premium-rate social-information or directory services | Check charges before calling back. |
| 894 | Premium-rate mass-call services | Often linked to campaigns, voting, or high-volume call services. |
| 895 | Premium-rate professional advice or assistance services | Avoid returning calls unless the service and charge are clear. |
| 899 | Premium-rate entertainment or paid digital service family | High-risk callback family; do not call unknown 899 numbers casually. |
Reporting and Consumer Protection
- Use WhoseNo to report suspicious numbers and help other visitors recognize repeated spam activity.
- Use the Registro Pubblico delle Opposizioni to object to marketing calls to fixed or mobile numbers.
- Use AGCOM channels for telecom transparency, caller-ID, and nuisance-call issues where relevant.
- Use privacy-authority or police channels when calls involve data misuse, fraud, identity theft, threats, or financial loss.
- Emergency number: 112. Legacy emergency/public numbers such as 113, 115, 118, and 1530 may also appear in official AGCOM numbering tables.
AGCOM anti-spoofing rules introduced in 2025 block many international calls that illegally present Italian fixed or mobile caller IDs, but users should still treat urgent payment, OTP, or credential requests as suspicious.
Frequently Asked Question
Everything you need to know about phone number lookup in Italy
Search the number on WhoseNo to review community reports, spam tags, caller comments, and Italian numbering clues. Italy uses distinct families for geographic landlines, mobile numbers, nomadic VoIP services, toll-free numbers, shared-cost services, premium-rate numbers, emergency numbers, and public utility short codes.
Italy uses country code +39. Geographic fixed-line numbers begin with 0, and that leading 0 remains part of the number even in international format, such as +39 06 for Rome or +39 02 for Milan. Mobile numbers usually start with 3 and are commonly written as +39 3XX XXX XXXX.
Not reliably. Italian mobile numbers start with 3, but number portability means a number can move between operators while keeping the same prefix. MIMIT maintains the official numbering and portability databases used by operators, so a prefix is only a line-type or original-allocation hint.
AGCOM market data lists Fastweb+Vodafone, TIM, WINDTRE, and Iliad as the main mobile groups, with PostePay/PosteMobile, CoopVoce, Lycamobile, and other MVNOs also present. AGCOM groups TIM with Kena Mobile and Fastweb+Vodafone with ho. Mobile/VEI in its recent operator figures.
Major Italian geographic prefixes include Rome 06, Milan 02, Turin 011, Genoa 010, Naples 081, Bologna 051, Florence 055, Venice/Mestre 041, Verona 045, Bari 080, Palermo 091, Catania 095, and Cagliari 070.
Search and report the number on WhoseNo so other users can see the warning. For unwanted marketing, register fixed or mobile numbers with the Registro Pubblico delle Opposizioni and use official AGCOM or privacy-authority channels where appropriate. If money, banking credentials, OTPs, or identity documents were exposed, contact your bank and the relevant authorities immediately.
No. WhoseNo shows public and user-contributed signals such as comments, caller names shared by users, business context, spam tags, and numbering clues. We do not provide private subscriber records, operator account data, or portability database access.
Common risks include bank or Poste Italiane impersonation, OTP phishing, fake delivery or customs-fee calls, aggressive electricity/gas contract teleselling, investment or crypto pitches, spoofed Italian landline or mobile caller IDs, and premium-rate callback traps involving 892, 894, 895, or 899 numbers.
Explore More Tools
Additional resources to help you stay safe from unknown callers
About WhoseNo.com
What We Provide
- Community-submitted reports about phone numbers
- General carrier and area code information
- A platform for users to share experiences with unknown callers
What We Do NOT Provide
- Real-time location tracking
- Personal information about phone owners
- Access to private records
This service is intended for identifying spam and scam calls only. Using our service to harass, stalk, or monitor individuals is strictly prohibited and may violate local laws.