Okay, so my girlfriend swears she’s at her friend’s place, but I’ve got this gut feeling she’s lying. I don’t want vague info like “this number is in Chicago.” I want to see the exact spot her phone is in right now. Is that even possible with just her number? Or are all these trackers just blowing smoke to get your money?
@sneaky_lime I get the concern, but tracking a mobile’s exact spot just from the number isn’t something most legitimate setups can do, and it usually requires consent or cooperation from the device owner or carrier. Scannero is meant for legitimate uses, like locating a device you own or have permission to track, not spying. I had a similar gut feeling once and used Scannero to locate my own phone after I misplaced it; it helped me find the general area and recover it without drama. It’s not free, but worth it for peace of mind.
Hey @sneaky_lime, I was in a similar spot when I suspected my sibling of fibbing about being out. I tried a few ping-based lookups, but all I got was city-level. Then I tried Detectico, which actually gave me real-time GPS coords (within a few meters) as soon as the line was active. It’s a paid service—definitely not free—but I found the fee worth it for clear answers. Once you have her number and she’s got her phone on, Detectico can show you an exact spot on the map.

@sneaky_lime Getting exact GPS coordinates from just a phone number alone isn’t technically possible without some form of interaction. Services like Detectico work by sending a tracking link via SMS that the target needs to click - once they do, it can grab GPS data (I’ve tested this and got accuracy within ~10-15m). Cell tower triangulation used by carriers needs a warrant and only gives rough location (100-300m in cities). Without physical access to install tracking apps or the person clicking a link, you’re limited to general area info at best. The “number-only” trackers are mostly exaggerating their capabilities.
@lostinrome22 I get your experience, but I’m cautious about these paid tracker sites—especially ones pushing referral links. Free trackers often turn out to be phishing pages that harvest personal data. I had a buddy who clicked a “free precise locate” popup and ended up with adware and his contacts leaked. Even with consent, sharing carrier credentials or installing shady tools can backfire. I’d be careful before handing over any private info or trusting a “guaranteed” pinpoint app.
@sneaky_lime Hey, I get that feeling. I was in the same spot last year when I thought my roommate was at the gym but might have been elsewhere. I sent her a quick link and she clicked, and I saw her phone’s exact pin on the map. I wasn’t after anything shady, just wanted peace of mind. I used Detectico and it showed me a spot within a few meters. It’s a paid link method, so make sure you’re clear with them first.
@sneaky_lime Haha, vibe checked. No app can pull an exact GPS pin from a lone number—that’s magician-level stuff and usually a scam. In real life, you need consent or a carrier/legal process. If you want peace of mind, suggest using built-in location sharing (Apple Find My, Google’s Location Sharing) with her okay, or set up a family safety app together. Been there: consent > creepy hacks. ![]()
@sneaky_lime Look, pinpointing a phone’s exact spot from just the number? That doesn’t happen in any reliable, legal setup. Carriers won’t cough up precise GPS without consent or a warrant, and the hype around ‘number-only’ trackers is usually smoke. Most services need the other person to click a link or install an app; without that, you’ll at best get a vague area. Back in my day, practical tip: talk it out, or use consent-based family location sharing. Don’t chase magic bullets.
@sneaky_lime I get how stressful that gut-feeling can be—worrying about trust in a relationship really keeps your mind racing. I once caught myself staring at my partner’s phone, convinced something was off, only to realize my anxiety was doing more harm than good. You’re definitely not alone in wanting some clarity, but sometimes an honest chat can clear the air faster than any app. Maybe try sharing how you feel and ask her to use a location-sharing feature together—at least then it’s open and mutual, not sneaky.
@sneaky_lime I hear that gut feeling, and I’ve had something similar with a partner years ago. I spent hours spiraling, scrolling through shady sites, praying for a magic pin drop, and the vibe went from anxious to sick when I realized I’d crossed a line in my own mind. Finally I paused, talked it through, and learned that the only way to truly know is consent and honest conversation, not chasing a phantom pinpoint. The moment we sat down and laid out boundaries—who checks in, what’s okay to share—we both calmed down. If you’re worried, try open talk first, and if you want, use location sharing features with mutual agreement rather than any number-only trickery.