A pre‑recorded robotic pitch – the epitome of impersonal marketing, turning people into mere digits. Whoever employs this has a terrible idea.
Reverse Phone Lookup in Singapore — Recent Community Reports
Check unknown Singapore numbers with recent reports (6 fixed, 8/9 mobile, 1800 toll‑free) and share your experience.
Unknown calls in Singapore
Unsure about a Singapore number? Explore concise community notes to judge calls and texts. You’ll see both legitimate callbacks (deliveries, banking, appointments) and waves of robocalls or phishing. Ranges like 6 (fixed lines) and 8/9 (mobile), plus 1800 toll‑free, are useful context but not proof of identity or exact location due to portability and VoIP — treat them as hints, not evidence.
Verification: return calls via the official number on the company website/app, check in‑app notices, and never share one‑time codes by phone. Use device/carrier blocking for repeat issues and leave a short, factual note here so others benefit from your experience.
Another call that clearly fit the scam pattern.
Seems like a typical unwanted caller—just another spammy number in my feed.
The call raised some spam suspicions; better ignore it.
I suspect this might be spam; the script sounded generic and unsolicited.
Probably an unwanted‑call sender – nothing worth my time.
Looks like a possible spam call. I didn't answer, but I'd be cautious if you get a similar number.
Got a spam SMS, just the usual promotional clutter.
Got a text that seemed like spam, not worth responding.
Another spam call.
A consulting firm urged a non‑Singaporean to submit a PR application, claiming they could assist.
A lady called me. Recieved the call, she was super impatient and hung up as soon as I said I didn’t recall signing up for anything.
The caller inquired if I had received a Singaporean/PR Careshield alert for people 30+, I mentioned being 18, yet they persisted and suggested meeting, using a genuine Malay female voice.
Unsolicited spam call!
Seems like spam, mate.
Someone from OCBC Bank was trying to sell me insurance, lol.
Likely a fraudster.
Irrelevant spam.
Probable spam; it's best to ignore.
Probably spam; I didn't recognize the source at all.
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FAQ — Singapore
How to verify callers in Singapore?
Use the official website/app number; avoid calling back the unknown number; check in‑app messages.
Do ranges prove origin?
No. Portability/VoIP make 6/8/9 ranges and 1800 patterns unreliable as proof of origin.
Common patterns?
Delivery updates, bank callbacks, 2FA codes; robocalls, parcel/account phishing, scripted sales.
What to include in a report?
Caller type, purpose, date/time, and cues that guided your decision.