A loud overseas call centre was pushing a utility scam.
Dodgy Utility Scam Alert! - +44 20 4520 3753 (020 4520 3753)
Summary — +442045203753
Expert Opinion
Shocking how these persistent callers target even TPS-registered lines without a second thought. Reports paint a picture of aggressive tactics, from fake utility deals demanding bank details to outright abusive rants when challenged. Many describe overseas accents and data-mining questions, often under guises like 'UK Today' that vanish under scrutiny. Hang up immediately on unsolicited queries—never share personal info. Block the number and report to Ofcom or Action Fraud to curb these nuisances. If abuse occurs, log details for potential police involvement. Staying vigilant protects your privacy without feeding the scammers' game.
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Recent Reports for 020 4520 3753
Terrible, pushy sales pitch – “HELLO SIR I AM CALLING FROM YOUR ELECTRICITY OR GAS SUPPLIER” sounded like a scam.
Over the past eight days I’ve received six calls on my TPS‑registered landline about gas, electricity and credit‑card rates; I keep telling them to leave me alone but they won’t quit, you know.
After I said I wasn’t interested, the caller erupted into racist slurs and even asked about my parents’ marital status.
Fraudsters pretended to offer cheap gas and electricity, asking for bank details; I hung up and blocked them.
While on holiday I got a call that went straight to voicemail – no answer and no message, which this site identifies as spam.
A call fell silent and was hung up on swiftly.
I picked up but nobody spoke; I've now blocked the number.
After I answered, they cut the line and I've blocked them.
Supposedly from a firm named UK Today, claimed to be a data‑management outfit, but a brief search shows it doesn’t exist. Avoid answering – they’re harvesting data. The caller hung up when I pointed that out.
Someone claimed to be from ‘UK Today’ and started asking four simple questions – after I refused the second one, they cut the call, so I never learned the remaining queries.
My name was mispronounced; someone must have sold this company false data using my number – unless everyone’s called James Taylor.
A representative from UK Today called, wanted a minute of my time, asked “Do you drive?” and then abruptly hung up when I pressed for details.
I terminated the call as soon as I picked up – go away.
Unexpected call requesting personal details – spam.
They mentioned my long‑gone maiden name, then said it wasn’t me and hung up – oddly courteous.
He claimed he wasn’t trying to sell anything, then repeatedly demanded my name despite my asking who was calling. After several prompts I told him to continue, and he finally told me to “f—‑k off” before hanging up. Charming, isn’t it?
Yet another shady overseas scammer.
Watch out – this looks like a fraudulent call.
The number isn’t saved in my contacts, left no voicemail – pure spam! I won’t waste any time on them.