Check any Equatorial Guinea phone number — find Orange EG or Hits Telecom carrier info and community reports instantly.
Our database cross-references carrier data and community reports for every +240 Equatorial Guinea number.
Name matches from publicly available records and directories linked to the number.
Carrier, number class (mobile, landline, VoIP), and prepaid status — all in one result.
Public social media profiles and photos linked to the number's owner.
Known addresses from public records — current and historical.
Vehicle-related records linked to the number's owner from publicly accessible sources.
Probability score for spam or scam activity based on community reports and call patterns.
Paste the number as you see it — with or without the country code. We handle the formatting.
We match the number against carrier records, public data, and crowd-sourced reports from people who received the same call.
Owner name, carrier (Orange EG), social profiles, and address history — all on one page, instantly.
Equatorial Guinea 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 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 222/333 | Landline | Malabo (Bioko Island) / Bata (Mainland) | Standard rate |
| 550/551/559 | Mobile | Orange Equatorial Guinea | Standard mobile rate |
| 990/991/999 | Mobile | Hits Telecom | Standard mobile rate |
| 080 | Toll-Free | Operator freephone | 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 Equatorial Guinea right now.
Callers impersonate Ministry of Finance or customs officials threatening penalties or goods seizure unless a fee is paid immediately. Government agencies in Equatorial Guinea issue official written notices and never demand phone payments.
Fraudsters offer investment opportunities in Equatorial Guinea's oil and gas sector with guaranteed returns. Large energy investments require formal contracts and government approvals — never transfer funds based solely on a phone call.
Callers announce lottery winnings or competition prizes and request advance fees or personal documents. No legitimate prize scheme demands advance payment by phone. Verify through the operator's official channels.
Look up any number — carrier data, spam reports, and risk score, all in one place.
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