Missed a call from Seattle, Spokane, or Vancouver number you don't recognize? Use our free Washington reverse phone lookup to find the owner's name and address if it's listed, plus whether anyone has reported it as spam or a scam.
Includes 604,898 FTC Do Not Call and robocall complaints filed by WA residents.
Washington phone numbers recently reported (last 30 days) for making unwanted sales calls or robocalls:
| Phone Number | FTC Complaints | Last Reported |
|---|---|---|
| (253) 200-1944 | ||
| (206) 479-8623 | ||
| (425) 537-6768 | ||
| (206) 875-0512 | ||
| (253) 200-9380 | ||
| (253) 237-1168 | ||
| (360) 890-1903 | ||
| (253) 527-5931 | ||
| (253) 780-0133 | ||
| (206) 209-2397 |
In May 2026, Washington residents filed 4,205 complaints to the FTC about phone numbers making unwanted calls and text messages, down 20% from the previous month.
Washington Consumer Protection Division: File a regional report directly with state authorities by calling (800) 551-4636.
Top cities covered by each WA area code to help you start your reverse number check:
| Area Codes | Cities |
|---|---|
| 206/564 | Seattle, Shoreline, Burien |
| 253 | Tacoma, Federal Way, Kent |
| 360/564 | Vancouver, Bellingham, Marysville |
| 425 | Bellevue, Everett, Renton |
| 509 | Spokane, Yakima, Spokane Valley |
Washington has approximately 10.6 million active phone numbers. Cell phones make up the majority with 8.7 million users, while traditional landlines have dwindled to 445,000 connections statewide. Internet phone services account for about 1.4 million numbers.
| Voice Subscriptions (thousands) | June 2023 | Dec 2023 | June 2024 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mobile telephony | 8,481 | 8,661 | 8,724 |
| Local exchange telephone service | 520 | 447 | 445 |
| VoIP subscriptions | 1,520 | 1,486 | 1,430 |
| Total | 10,521 | 10,594 | 10,599 |
Yes. Washington has no comprehensive consumer data privacy law of the CCPA/VCDPA type. The My Health My Data Act (SHB 1155, 2023) is a sector-specific health-data law and does not apply to phone lookup services. Unlike neighboring Oregon (OR-CPA, effective July 1, 2024), Washington residents have no general privacy opt-out rights for lookup databases. Federal FCRA protections apply statewide: misusing lookup results for employment, tenant, or credit screening is prohibited in Washington as in every other state.