Look up any Peruvian phone number — find owner name, Claro or Movistar carrier info, and community scam reports instantly.
Our database cross-references MTC carrier data, public records, and community reports for every +51 Peru number — Lima, Arequipa, Trujillo, and all regions.
First and last name linked to the number from publicly available directories and records.
Mobile, landline, VoIP, or prepaid — and which network carries this number.
Linked public social media accounts and profile images associated with the number.
Current and previous addresses where publicly available — useful for verifying caller identity.
Alternative names and aliases the number's owner may be known by, from public directory records.
A 0–10 spam and scam probability rating based on report volume, patterns, and community activity.
Paste the number as you see it — with or without the country code. We handle the formatting.
We cross-check carrier records, public directories, and community submissions to build a complete picture of the caller.
Owner name, carrier (Claro PE, Movistar PE, Entel PE, Bitel), social profiles, and community reports — all on one page.
Peru 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 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 9xx | Mobile | All PE operators (9-digit) | Standard mobile rate |
| 1 | Landline | Lima & Callao | Standard rate |
| 54 | Landline | Arequipa | Standard rate |
| 44 | Landline | Trujillo | Standard rate |
| 84 | Landline | Cusco | Standard rate |
| 0800 | Toll-Free | Freephone — all PE networks | 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 Peru right now.
Callers claim to be from SUNAT (Peruvian tax authority) threatening arrest or business closure for tax arrears. SUNAT communicates through sunat.gob.pe and official mail — never by demanding immediate phone transfers.
Fraudsters pose as Banco de Credito (BCP) or Interbank staff claiming fraudulent transactions. They request your digital key or SMS codes. No Peruvian bank calls asking for authentication codes. Call BCP at 311-9898 or Interbank at 311-9000 if suspicious.
Callers or SMS senders offer fake promotions for Yape or Plin requesting OTP confirmation. These e-wallet providers never send promos requiring you to share OTPs. Block the number and report to your bank.
Type the number below — carrier data, community reports, and risk score in one result.
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