Check any El Salvador phone number — find Tigo SV, Claro, or Digicel carrier info and community scam reports instantly.
Our database cross-references SIGET carrier data and community reports for every +503 El Salvador number.
Name results from public directories and open records linked to the number.
Carrier identification plus line class — mobile, landline, VoIP, or prepaid.
Potential family connections and related records associated with the number's owner.
Current and past address data from publicly accessible sources.
Relatives, family members, and known connections linked to the number's owner from public records.
Spam and scam probability rating based on report volume, call patterns, and community data.
Paste the number as you see it — with or without the country code. We handle the formatting.
Our system checks carrier allocation records, public directories, and community-submitted reports simultaneously — instant results.
Owner name, carrier (Tigo SV, Claro SV, Digicel SV, Movistar SV), social profiles, and community reports — all on one page.
El Salvador phone number prefixes follow national telecom authority allocation rules — the prefix tells you the operator and line type.
| Prefix | Type | What it means | Cost to call back |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7xxx | Mobile | Tigo / Digicel mobile | Standard mobile rate |
| 6xxx | Mobile | Claro / Movistar mobile | Standard mobile rate |
| 2xxx | Landline | San Salvador fixed lines | Standard rate |
| 2xxx (regional) | Landline | Regional fixed lines | Standard rate |
| 800 | Toll-Free | Freephone numbers | Free to call |
Each dialling code maps to a city or region. Click any to explore reported numbers.
These are the most-reported caller fraud patterns in El Salvador right now.
Callers claim to be from the Direccion General de Tesoro (DGT) or Ministerio de Hacienda threatening penalties for unpaid taxes. Salvadoran authorities issue formal written notices — never demand phone transfers. Verify at hacienda.gob.sv.
Fraudsters pose as bank staff claiming suspicious transactions. They request OTP codes or card details. No Salvadoran bank calls asking for OTPs. Contact your bank's official fraud line immediately.
Callers claim a remittance sent from the US has been held and requires a fee to release. Western Union and MoneyGram never charge release fees by phone. Verify directly with the remittance service provider.
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