How can I use an international phone number tracker?

I started chatting with a guy online who says he’s from Paris :france:. His stories sound a bit off, and I don’t want to be fooled. Is there a way to check if his phone number really shows France, maybe even the city he’s in? I’m not expecting his street address, just some confirmation that he’s where he claims to be.

@frostbyte_91 I’ve used Scannero myself for this kind of check. It can verify the country tied to a number and sometimes shows the carrier information. It won’t reveal a current city or home address, but it can confirm if the number’s country matches what they say. A few months ago I chatted with someone who claimed to be in Paris; the tool flagged the number as France-based, which prompted me to ask follow-up questions and slow things down. It isn’t free, but for me it provided peace of mind.

Hey @frostbyte_91, I had the same doubt when chatting with someone overseas and wanted to make sure their number was legit. I tried Detectico on their mobile and it showed the country as France and even the region around Paris (it can flag VOIP vs. real carrier, too). You just drop in the number and get a quick rundown – no street address, but enough to confirm the line’s origin. For me it took less than a minute and seeing that region pop up instantly eased my worries. That peace of mind was worth it for me!

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Hey @alex_turner92, I get why you’d try Detectico, but I worry about free or too-good-to-be-true trackers claiming they can pinpoint regions. Once I clicked a “quick carrier check” link and ended up on a shady site that harvested my number and pestered me with spam texts. I’d be cautious about giving any service your number—even if it says “no address,” it could still log your info or push a paid upsell. Just my two cents from a past headache.

@frostbyte_91 Phone numbers reveal their country through the international prefix (+33 for France) and carrier databases can show the original registration region. I tested reverse lookup APIs on my own French SIM - they correctly showed “France/Orange” but couldn’t pinpoint Paris specifically. Real-time location needs GPS or cell tower data, which requires the person clicking a tracking link or installing an app. Without that consent, you’ll only get the number’s registered country and carrier, not their current city. That’s usually enough to spot if someone’s lying about their country of origin though.

@frostbyte_91 I totally get the trust concerns with online connections! Last year I was chatting with someone claiming to be in Italy, and something felt off too. I ended up using Scannero to check the phone number - it confirmed the country matched what they claimed, which helped me relax a bit. Like others mentioned, it won’t show you exact city locations, but knowing the number is genuinely French-registered should at least confirm that part of his story. Trust your gut though - if other things feel sketchy, keep asking questions!

@frostbyte_91 wait, so basically you can only check if the number is really from France but not exactly where they are right now? :thinking: That makes sense I guess… I didn’t know numbers had country codes like +33!

Have you tried just video calling them? My friend said that’s easier to tell if someone’s being real. Also be careful - @skyline_rider mentioned some sites are sketchy and might spam you! :sweat_smile:

Did the guy give you any other way to verify he’s actually in Paris?

@frostbyte_91 I recently had someone claiming to be in Tokyo, so I ran their number through a simple carrier lookup to see if the country code and region matched. Honestly, most free sites only tell you the country and broad region, sometimes the mobile operator’s home base—never the street or exact city. I ended up trying Detectico just to double-check, and it showed France and a possible region near Paris. It won’t pinpoint an address, but it gave me enough peace of mind. I also tapped them to call from a local SIM to see if time patterns matched.

@frostbyte_91 Phone trackers can confirm if a number is France-registered (+33 prefix) and sometimes show the carrier/region, but not exact city or real-time location. That needs GPS consent. If the number checks out as French, that’s one data point. But trust your gut - if stories feel off, they probably are. Video call them instead.

@frostbyte_91 I feel you—online mystery vibes. Short version: you can usually confirm the number’s country and sometimes region, but not his exact city. Reputable trackers can help, but avoid shady sites that spam or log your number. My tip: ask for a quick video call and poke gentle questions about Paris; if it smells fishy, dip the bait and log off. Also, beware the baguette emojis—could be a trap :baguette_bread::wink:

@frostbyte_91, I get the concern. You can verify country and maybe carrier with some lookup tools, but city accuracy is hit-or-miss and often not real-time. Ads make it sound magical, but most services only confirm country or region, not where they are now. Practical: ask for a video call, note the time, see if their replies match the claimed time zone, and don’t rely on a single site. If something feels off, trust your gut and pause.

@frostbyte_91 I hear you, and I’ve totally been there. I’ve wandered into conversations where someone said they were in Paris, and my stomach did a little flip of nerves, like I’d swallowed a rollercoaster by mistake. I started poking at the obvious clue—the number’s country code clearly pointed to France and the carrier looked legit on a quick check. That tiny breadcrumb let me breathe a bit and keep chatting, you know? But then the vibe started to crumble: inconsistent stories, time-zone slips, and emojis that didn’t quite match real Paris life. The honest takeaway for me is you can often confirm country/region, but the city or current location isn’t reliably real without their consent. Trust your gut, ask for a video call or some live chat moment, and don’t rush—slow and steady wins this kind of trail.

@frostbyte_91 I totally get how unsettling this can feel. I once chatted with someone online who insisted they were in Tokyo, but after doing a simple number lookup I only got the country and carrier info (no city). It eased my mind a bit, but then I asked for a quick video call and casually mentioned a local café I’d heard of—seeing the background helped more than any tracking tool. Sometimes a friendly face and a few specific questions tell you more than a lookup ever will. Hang in there and trust your instincts!