If a call comes in with your area code — or even the same first six digits as your own number — it’s easy to assume it might be local, urgent, or worth answering. That’s exactly what scammers want. The FTC calls this trick “neighbor spoofing,” a tactic where scammers fake caller ID to make a number look familiar and increase the odds that you’ll pick up. In some cases, they can even match the first six digits of your phone number.
What is neighbor spoofing and why does it work?
Neighbor spoofing is a type of caller ID spoofing. That means the caller deliberately falsifies the number that appears on your screen. The FCC says scammers often use neighbor spoofing so a call appears to come from a local number, or from a business or government agency you may know and trust. If you answer, the scammer may use a script to try to steal money or personal information.
This tactic works because local numbers feel safer. A familiar-looking number could be your child’s school, a nearby doctor’s office, a delivery driver, or a neighbor. Scammers exploit that instinct. The FTC specifically warns that if a number on caller ID looks like your own number pattern, it could still be fake, and letting it go to voicemail is often the safest move.
How common are unwanted scam calls?
They’re still a huge problem. According to the FTC’s 2025 National Do Not Call Registry Data Book, consumers filed more than 2.6 million complaints about telemarketing violations in fiscal year 2025, and robocalls continued to make up most Do Not Call violation complaints.
That number matters because it shows scam and spam calls are not random flukes — they’re a persistent, large-scale threat. And because spoofed local numbers increase answer rates, scammers keep using them. The FCC warns that caller ID can’t be trusted on its own.
How can you tell a local-looking call is a scam?
Watch for these red flags:
- The number looks local, but you weren’t expecting a call. The FCC says spoofers may use local area codes and familiar-looking numbers to trick you into answering.
- There’s pressure to act immediately. Scammers create urgency to get money or personal information before you have time to think.
- The caller asks for personal or financial details. The FCC says never share account numbers, Social Security numbers, passwords, or PINs in response to an unexpected call.
- You’re told to press a button to stop the calls. The FCC warns that pressing buttons can signal that your number is active.
What should you do instead of answering?
Here’s the safest playbook:
- Ignore calls from unknown numbers, even if they look local. Both the FCC and FTC recommend not answering unexpected calls from numbers you don’t recognize.
- Let the call go to voicemail. If it’s real, the caller can leave a message. The FTC specifically recommends voicemail as one option for suspicious local-looking calls.
- Call back only using a verified number. If someone claims to be from your bank, utility, school, or a government office, hang up and call the official number from a bill, statement, or website. ,
- Use call-blocking or call-labeling tools. The FTC says call-blocking apps and carrier tools can stop or flag many unwanted calls before they reach you.
- Report the call. You can report unwanted calls and scams at ReportFraud.ftc.gov, and spoofing complaints can also be filed with the FCC.
A local number is no longer a sign that a call is safe. Scammers can fake caller ID, copy your area code, and even mimic the first six digits of your number to get your attention. The smartest habit is simple: if you don’t recognize the number, don’t answer. Let it go to voicemail, verify before calling back, and remember that “local” doesn’t always mean legitimate.


