Have you gotten a call from an imposter, maybe someone pretending to be with the Social Security Administration, IRS, or a tech support company, this year? If so, you’re not alone. Calls from imposters were the most-reported topic of unwanted calls to the FTC over the past year (FY2019).
You can see our annual report on Do Not Call complaints, with state-specific data. But here are some key takeaways:
- The FTC got 5.4 million complaints about unwanted calls this year.
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71% of complaints reported the call was a robocall.
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Calls from imposters are now the most-reported type of unwanted call, with 574,000 complaints.
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After imposters, the next most-reported topics were calls about medical issues and prescriptions, as well as reducing debt.
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The states with the most consumer complaints (per 100,000 population) were Colorado, Oregon, Arizona, New Jersey, and Nevada.
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The Do Not Call Registry now has 239.5 million numbers on it. More than 4 million of those were added over the past year.
Find out more about what’s happening in your state. But remember — you don’t need to wait for our annual report to know what’s happening. As we told you this summer, the FTC’s Do Not Call data is now available in an interactive format at ftc.gov/exploredata, and is updated quarterly.
The FTC continues to go after the companies and scammers behind these calls, so please keep reporting unwanted calls at donotcall.gov (or, if you’ve lost money to a scam call, at ftc.gov/complaint instead). We take the phone numbers you report and release them to the public each business day, which helps phone carriers and other partners that are working on call-blocking and call-labeling solutions. Your reports also help law enforcement identify the people behind illegal calls.
To find out more about how to get fewer calls and avoid scams, check out the articles, videos, and infographics at ftc.gov/calls, and share them with your family and friends.
In reply to Ftc you need to push real by resident.
In reply to Our land line and our cell by BevWms
You may want to read this article about blocking unwanted calls. It tells how to block calls from mobile and landline phones, and from service that comes over the internet (VoIP). This one-minute video shows how to block calls on your home phone.
In reply to You may want to read this by FTC Staff
In reply to Here's a problem I found when by jsl
In reply to Here's a problem I found when by jsl
In reply to Our land line and our cell by BevWms
In reply to I've been registered with Do by senior2825
The National Do Not Call Registry was created to stop unwanted sales calls from real companies. The Registry is a list that tells companies the numbers they should not call. The FTC does not and cannot block calls. The Registry can’t stop calls from scammers who ignore the Registry.
If your phone number is on the Registry and you're getting a lot of unwanted calls, the calls are probably from scammers.
In reply to I've been registered with Do by senior2825
In reply to Last time I reported a caller by Benician resident
There's a quick way to report unwanted calls at DoNotCall.gov.
The only information you have to give is:
You can choose to give more information of course, and that can help law enforcement, even if the call came from a spoofed phone number.
Sometimes the FTC and other law enforcement agencies can still trace a call based on information you provide. Your complaint helps because the FTC analyzes complaint data and trends to identify illegal callers based on calling patterns. We use additional information you report, like the number you're told to call back, to track down scammers
In reply to Can a legal decree be issued by itaylo01
There are ways for you to block calls. Read about how to block unwanted calls on a mobile phone, landline phone or if you get phone service over the internet (VoIP). You might be able to send all calls to voice mail, or to create a list of the only numbers that may ring through to you.
In reply to I am dealing with a serious by PAM
In reply to I am dealing with a serious by PAM
In reply to We have had both our cell and by DoNotCall
Some calls are still allowed when your number is on the Do Not Call Registry. That includes calls from charities, political calls, calls from debt collectors, purely informational calls (like an airline calling to say your flight is delayed), and surveys. A charity or fundraiser should cooperate if you ask them to take you off their calling list.
The Registry stops sales calls from real companies. The FTC does not and cannot block calls. The Registry can’t stop calls from scammers who ignore the Registry. This article tells more about the Registry.
In reply to Who do we write to get cell by Privacy invasion
No, there isn't a law that cell phone numbers must be released to the public, and the government hasn't released mobile phone numbers to telemarketers. If you heard a rumors like that, they're false.
You register a mobile phone number the same way you do all your phone numbers. There’s no separate list or database for mobile phones. There’s no deadline for registering mobile phone numbers. Registrations for mobile phone numbers don’t expire.
In reply to At least for a cell phone, by Roscat
In reply to I realize this is about calls by Kookie
In reply to Not interested in the by Ron in Austin
Follow the link in the blog that explains how the FTC continues to go after the companies and scammers behind these calls. Learn how, to date, the Commission has brought 134 enforcement actions against companies and telemarketers for Do Not Call, abandoned call, robocall and Registry violations. To date, 121 of these FTC enforcement actions have been resolved, and in those cases the agency has recovered over $50 million in civil penalties and $71 million in redress or disgorgement.
In reply to DO NOT CALL is a very poor by Patsy
Pagination