Identification

07418 numbers: who called me from an 07418 number?

07418 is a normal UK mobile range, but it appears often in spam reports. Here's what 07418 numbers are, why they show up in scam complaints, and how to check a specific 07418 number safely.

13 min read
Managing Director, OmegaIT · OmegaIT · Published 20 June 2026
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If an 07418 number has called or texted you, here is the short version: 07418 is a normal UK mobile range, not an area code, a premium line or anything inherently sinister. Numbers starting 07418 are ordinary mobile numbers allocated to UK networks. However, 07418 — like several other 074x and 0741x ranges — turns up frequently in spam and scam reports, because these newer, cheaply-obtained mobile ranges are popular with the operations behind nuisance texts and calls. So the prefix itself tells you very little about a single caller; what matters is the specific number and what it did. This guide explains what 07418 numbers are, why they crop up in so many 'who called me?' searches, and exactly how to check one safely before you call or text back.

Is 07418 an area code?

No — and this is the single most useful thing to understand. 07418 is not a geographic area code like 0151 (Liverpool) or 0115 (Nottingham). Numbers beginning 07 are UK mobile numbers, and the digits after the 07 identify the block a network was allocated, not a place. So an 07418 number is not 'from' any particular town or city; the person holding it could be anywhere in the UK (or, given number portability and internet calling, effectively anywhere). Searches like '07418 area code' are extremely common, but the honest answer is that there is no area attached to it. If you want to understand how the 07 ranges map to the different mobile networks, our guide to UK mobile networks by 07 prefix explains how the system works and why a prefix can never pin down a location.

What does an 07418 number cost to call?

Calling an 07418 number costs the same as calling any other UK mobile — which, on virtually all modern pay-monthly and many pay-as-you-go plans, means it comes out of your inclusive minutes at no extra charge. There is nothing premium about the 07418 range. This is important because a common worry is that returning a missed call from an unfamiliar 07 number will cost a fortune; for genuine 07 mobiles it will not. The real cost risk lies elsewhere: with premium-rate ranges (which begin 09, or 070 'personal numbers' that look like mobiles but are not), and with scams that try to provoke you into calling such numbers. An 07418 number is a standard mobile, so the cost is normal — but you should still check before calling back, for the reasons below.

Why does 07418 show up in so many spam reports?

If you have searched 07418 because the number felt suspicious, your instinct is reasonable — these ranges genuinely do appear disproportionately in nuisance-call and scam-text reports. The reason is practical rather than mysterious. Newer mobile number ranges are cheap and easy to obtain in bulk, often via pay-as-you-go SIMs or internet-based services that hand out mobile numbers programmatically. Operations that send scam texts ('your parcel could not be delivered', 'you have an outstanding toll', 'mum, this is my new number') or make nuisance calls churn through large quantities of these numbers, discarding each as it gets blocked or reported. That is why a freshly-allocated range can rack up complaints quickly: it is not that 07418 is a 'scam prefix', but that the kind of cheap, disposable numbering scammers favour often falls in these newer bands.

The crucial point is that this is a tendency across the range, not a verdict on your specific caller. Plenty of ordinary people, small businesses, couriers, tradespeople and services hold 07418 numbers and use them perfectly legitimately. So seeing 'lots of reports about 0741x numbers' should raise your alertness, but it cannot tell you whether the particular 07418 number that contacted you is one of the bad ones. For that you have to check the exact number, which a lookup makes quick and easy. Our UK scam call patterns guide covers the common scripts these numbers are used for, so you can recognise them instantly.

Genuine caller or scam? Reading an 07418 contact

Because the prefix is neutral, you judge an 07418 number the same way you would judge any unknown caller: by behaviour and footprint, not by the digits. The table below sets out the signals that lean one way or the other.

No single signal is conclusive — weigh them together, and check the specific number.
SignalLeans genuineLeans spam / scam
What they wantA normal, expected matterUrgency, money, codes, or a link to tap
How they contacted youExpected call or reply to your enquiryOut-of-the-blue text with a link or 'new number'
The number's footprintMatches a real person or businessAppears on spam-report threads
Community reportsFew or noneRecent, consistent nuisance reports

A genuine 07418 caller — a courier, a tradesperson returning your enquiry, a friend's new number — will make sense in context and will not pressure you. A scam contact will push urgency, ask for money or one-time codes, or send a link to 'track a parcel' or 'pay a fee'. If a text claims to be from someone you know on a 'new number', verify it through a channel you already trust before acting. For the full method of identifying any unknown caller, see our who called me guide.

Common 07418 scam and nuisance patterns

Reports tied to 0741x and similar mobile ranges tend to cluster around a handful of recognisable scripts. Smishing texts are the most common: a message about a missed parcel delivery, an unpaid road toll or fee, a bank 'security alert', or an HMRC 'refund' or 'fine', each carrying a link to a fake website designed to harvest your card or login details. 'Hi Mum/Dad' impersonation texts claim to be a family member messaging from a new number after losing their phone, then ask for money for an urgent bill. Missed-call and 'wangiri' patterns ring once to tempt a call-back. And ordinary nuisance marketing — recorded messages about accidents, energy, or debt — also rides on these ranges. The common thread is that the message or call tries to make you act quickly without checking. Recognising the script is half the battle; the other half is verifying the number.

A realistic example: the '07418 parcel' text

Here is a scenario reported constantly. You get a text from an 07418 number: 'Royal Mail: your parcel is being held as a £1.99 shipping fee is unpaid. Pay here to arrange redelivery: [link].' It looks plausible — you may even be expecting a parcel — and the fee is small enough that paying feels easier than worrying. That is exactly the design. The link leads to a convincing fake page that captures your card details and often enough information to attempt much larger fraud later. The tiny 'fee' is bait; the real goal is your payment data. Couriers and Royal Mail do sometimes text about deliveries, which is what makes this work, but they do not collect 'release fees' through links in unsolicited texts.

The calm response: do not tap the link. If you are genuinely expecting a parcel, go to the courier's official website or app and track it using the reference from the retailer you actually bought from. Forward the scam text free to 7726 so your network can investigate the source, then delete it. If you have already tapped a link and entered card details, contact your bank immediately on the number on your card (or dial 159) and explain what happened. The same approach applies to 'toll', 'fine', 'tax refund' and 'bank alert' texts from 07418 numbers: never act through the message, always go direct to the organisation through a route you control. Our reverse phone lookup guide shows how to research the sending number while you are at it.

How to check a specific 07418 number

  1. Don't react on impulse

    Don't call back a missed 07418 call or reply to a text until you've checked. Reacting is exactly what nuisance operations want.

  2. Look it up

    Type the full 07418 number into the lookup on this site to see its details and any community reports tied to it.

  3. Search it online

    Put the number in quotes in a search engine. Scam numbers usually surface on complaint threads; genuine businesses surface their own pages.

  4. Verify any 'organisation' independently

    If a text or call claims to be a bank, courier, HMRC or similar, contact them through their official app or website — never the message's link or number.

  5. Block, report and move on

    Block nuisance 07418 numbers, forward scam texts to 7726, and report fraud to Action Fraud. You don't need to know who the caller is to stop them.

You can also browse the wider context for this range on our 07418 number range page, and use the general who called me checklist for any unknown caller. Checking takes under a minute and removes all the guesswork.

Should you ever call an 07418 number back?

Sometimes, yes — but only after a quick check, and never reflexively. There are entirely legitimate reasons an 07418 number might call you: a delivery driver who can't find your address, a tradesperson or contractor returning your enquiry, a clinic or service using a mobile line, or simply a friend or family member with a new SIM. If the call was expected, or the number checks out as a real business when you look it up, calling back is perfectly fine and costs you nothing beyond your normal mobile minutes. The danger is not the 07418 prefix; it is calling back blindly when the 'missed call' is actually a lure, or when the number turns out to be a disguised premium or international line. So the rule is simple: if you were expecting it or it checks out, call back without worry; if it came out of nowhere and you can't verify it, look it up first. A genuine caller who needs you will try again or leave a message, so there is no cost to waiting until you have checked.

It is also worth being a little sceptical of voicemails and texts that try to manufacture a reason to call back — 'we tried to deliver a package', 'there's a problem with your account', 'you've won' — especially when they push you towards a different number to ring. Returning a call to the 07418 number that rang you is usually harmless if the number is genuine, but ringing a *new* number a message tells you to call is a classic way to route you to a premium line or a scam call centre. When in doubt, ignore the instruction in the message and instead reach the organisation it claims to be through their official contact details. That single habit defuses the large majority of call-back traps that use mobile-looking numbers as bait.

Cutting down nuisance texts and calls

If 07418 and similar numbers are pestering you regularly, a few habits cut the volume. Use your phone's built-in tools to block specific numbers and to silence calls from unknown numbers so they go to voicemail rather than interrupting you. Forward scam texts to 7726 (free on all UK networks) so providers can trace and block the sources; forward the sender's number when prompted. Register with the Telephone Preference Service to reduce compliant marketing calls — it won't stop scammers, who ignore the rules, but it trims the legitimate noise. And be careful where you share your mobile number: every competition, online form and public profile is a potential route onto a list. Reducing how widely your number circulates is one of the most effective long-term defences.

Most importantly, don't engage. Replying 'STOP' to a genuine marketing text works, but replying to a *scam* text — or pressing a key during a recorded call — simply confirms your number is live and active, which makes you a more valuable target. Treat unsolicited 07418 contact the way you'd treat a stranger knocking with an unbelievable deal: polite indifference, no engagement, and a quick check if it claims to be someone you'd actually want to hear from. Combined with blocking and reporting, that approach steadily reduces the nuisance traffic reaching you, and makes the occasional genuine 07418 call easy to spot among the noise. Remember, too, that the range itself will not stay 'suspicious' forever — as scammers burn through numbers and move on, the same 07418 number can pass to a perfectly innocent new owner, which is exactly why judging the live number beats trusting old reputation.

Why newer mobile ranges fill up with reports

It is worth understanding the lifecycle of a mobile number range, because it explains why ranges like 07418 attract clusters of reports while older, long-established ranges seem quieter. When Ofcom allocates a fresh block of mobile numbers to the networks, those numbers are 'clean' — they have no history. Networks hand them out to new pay-monthly and pay-as-you-go customers, but blocks of them also end up with the SIM resellers, bulk providers and internet-calling services that supply numbers in quantity. Some of that quantity is bought by entirely legitimate businesses — delivery firms, field-service companies, app providers that text verification codes — but some is bought by the operations behind nuisance texts and calls, precisely because newer ranges are cheaper and more readily available in bulk. So a newer range accumulates a mixed reputation faster than an old one, and because the bad actors generate far more contacts per number than ordinary users, their footprint dominates the search results even though they may be a minority of the actual holders.

This also explains the 'churn' you see in reports. A scam operation does not keep a number long: as soon as a number is widely blocked, reported and flagged by networks' spam filters, it becomes useless to them, so they discard it and move to the next batch. That is why you will often find reports about an 0741x number that abruptly stop after a certain date — the number was burned and abandoned, and may even have been reassigned to a perfectly innocent new owner later. It is a key reason not to treat the prefix, or even old reports, as a permanent verdict: the same number can be a scam line one month and a genuine person's mobile the next. The only reliable signal is what *your* specific contact did and what the number's footprint looks like *now*, which is why a fresh lookup beats any assumption based on the 07418 prefix alone. For the bigger picture of how the 07 ranges are organised, our 07 mobile prefixes explained guide is a useful companion.

Understanding this lifecycle should also reassure you about your own 07418 number, if you happen to have one. Holding a number in a range that attracts scam reports does not mean your number is compromised or that you have done anything wrong — it simply means your number sits in a recently-issued band, and the occasional person who searches the broader prefix may see alarming results that have nothing to do with you. If you run a small business on such a number and worry that potential customers might be put off, the practical defences are the same ones that help everyone: keep your number consistently associated with your real business name online (on your website, listings and profiles) so that a search surfaces *you* rather than generic complaints, and consider a recognisable, professional voicemail greeting so missed-call recipients know immediately who tried to reach them. The more public, legitimate footprint a number has, the more a lookup or search will identify it correctly — which benefits both you and the people you call.

There is a wider lesson here that applies well beyond the 07418 range. As Ofcom releases more mobile number blocks to meet demand, the 'newest' ranges will always be the ones where scam and nuisance reports appear to concentrate, simply because that is where cheap, disposable numbering is most available at any given moment. A few years ago the numbers attracting suspicion were in different bands; a few years from now they will be in newer ones still. So rather than memorising a list of 'bad prefixes', the durable habit is the one this guide keeps returning to: judge the individual number and the individual contact, not the band it sits in. That approach never goes out of date, works for every range, and protects you against both the genuine risks and the unnecessary worry of assuming an entire prefix is dangerous when most of the numbers in it belong to ordinary people and businesses going about their day.

Bottom line

07418 is an ordinary UK mobile range — not an area code, not premium, and not in itself a sign of a scam. But because newer mobile ranges are cheap and disposable, they appear often in spam and scam reports, so an unexpected 07418 call or text deserves a moment's caution. Don't react on impulse: look the number up, read any reports, and verify any claimed organisation through its official channels rather than the message in front of you. Forward scam texts to 7726, block nuisances, and if money is involved dial 159. For more, see UK mobile networks by prefix and the general who called me guide.

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Frequently asked questions

Is 07418 an area code?

No. 07418 is a UK mobile prefix, not a geographic area code. The digits after 07 identify the mobile number range a network was allocated, not a town or city, so an 07418 number isn't tied to any particular location.

Who called me from an 07418 number?

It could be a genuine caller — a courier, tradesperson, service or a friend's new number — or a spam/scam operation, since newer mobile ranges are popular for nuisance texts and calls. The prefix alone doesn't tell you, so look the specific number up and check for reports.

Is an 07418 number a scam?

Not necessarily, but these ranges do appear often in scam reports. The number itself is a normal mobile; what matters is the behaviour. Be wary of unexpected texts with links, requests for money or codes, or 'new number' messages, and verify before acting.

Does it cost extra to call an 07418 number?

No. 07418 is a standard UK mobile range, so calling it costs the same as any other mobile and is usually within your inclusive minutes. Be careful not to confuse it with premium 09 numbers or 070 'personal numbers', which can cost much more.

Should I call back a missed call from an 07418 number?

Only after checking. If the call was expected or the number checks out as a genuine business, calling back is fine and costs nothing extra. If it came out of nowhere and you can't verify it, look it up first — a genuine caller will try again or leave a message.

I got a parcel/toll text from an 07418 number — is it real?

Almost certainly a scam. Couriers, Royal Mail, toll operators and HMRC don't collect fees or fines through links in unsolicited texts. Don't tap the link; go to the organisation's official app or website directly, and forward the text free to 7726.

How do I check an 07418 number safely?

Type the full number into a lookup to see its details and any reports, and search it in quotes online. Don't reply to texts or return calls until you've checked, and verify any claimed organisation through its official contact details rather than the message.

How do I stop nuisance 07418 texts and calls?

Block the specific numbers, silence calls from unknown numbers, forward scam texts free to 7726, and register with the Telephone Preference Service to cut compliant marketing. Avoid replying or pressing keys, which only confirms your number is active.

Can an 07418 number be someone with a new phone?

Yes. Plenty of people, small businesses and services hold 07418 numbers legitimately, including someone who's just got a new SIM. But scammers also use 'this is my new number' as a hook, so verify a surprising 'new number' message through a channel you already trust.

What should I do if I tapped a link in an 07418 scam text?

If you entered card or login details, contact your bank immediately on the number on your card or dial 159, change any exposed passwords, and report it to Action Fraud. Acting quickly limits the damage. Then forward the original text to 7726 and delete it.

Sources & references

  1. UK mobile-number allocations — 07 ranges by MNO
    Ofcomwww.ofcom.org.uk/phones-and-broadband/phone-numbers/numbering-policy/numbering-plan
  2. Tackling scam calls: CLI authentication
    Ofcomwww.ofcom.org.uk/phones-and-broadband/scam-calls-and-texts/cli-authentication
  3. Forwarding suspicious texts to 7726
    National Cyber Security Centrewww.ncsc.gov.uk/collection/phishing-scams/report-scam-call
  4. Action Fraud — UK fraud reporting
    City of London Policewww.actionfraud.police.uk
  5. 159 — the Stop Scams UK service
    Stop Scams UKstopscamsuk.org.uk/159