Who called me from 01942 943360?

01942 943360 is a geographic landline number from Wigan, in a block allocated by Ofcom to Voxbone SA. Checked 1 time by UK users.

Free, no sign-up. We don't share your search. Powered by Ofcom data, refreshed weekly.

Quick facts

Number
01942 943360
Type
Geographic landline
Location
Wigan
Range holder
Voxbone SA
Range allocated
2022
Times checked
1
Reports
0

Community reports for 01942 943360

No reports have been filed for this number yet. If 01942 943360 called you, you can add the first report below — it's anonymous, takes seconds, and helps the next person who searches this number decide whether to pick up.

Report 01942 943360

Had a call from this number? Tell other UK users what it was — it takes 20 seconds and is published instantly.

What kind of number is 01942 943360?

01942 943 XXX is a number block in Wigan, in the historic county of Greater Manchester, an area with a population of approximately 103,608. Standard landlines in this area use the format 01942 943123, with the first part being the dialling code and the rest being the local number.

This block — 01942 943 XXX — was allocated by Ofcom to Voxbone SA in 2022. Voxbone SA either operates the numbers directly or sub-allocates them to resellers and downstream carriers, which is why a single 01942 943 XXX prefix can be used by many different organisations. You can verify any allocation against Ofcom's National Telephone Numbering Plan, which is updated weekly.

Is it safe to answer or call back 01942 943360?

There isn't yet enough community data to give a verdict on 01942 943360, although it has been looked up 1 time on this site. That usually means the number is either newly active or simply hasn't bothered enough people to be reported. Apply the standard checks below before trusting any unexpected caller.

One important caveat applies to every UK number, including this one: caller-ID spoofing means the number you see is not guaranteed to be the line actually calling. If a call from 01942 943360 claims to be your bank, HMRC or a delivery company and asks you to act urgently, hang up and contact the organisation directly using a number you've verified yourself — for banks you can simply dial 159.

What to do if 01942 943360 called you

  • Don't act on the call alone. If the caller claimed to be your bank, HMRC, a courier or a utility, hang up and contact the organisation on a number you find yourself — never one the caller gives you. For banks, dial 159.
  • Never share security details. Full passwords, PINs and one-time passcodes are never requested by legitimate UK organisations on an outbound call.
  • Don't return a missed call you don't recognise. One-ring 'wangiri' scams rely on call-backs, sometimes routed to premium-rate lines.
  • Report what happened. Use the report form above to warn other UK users, and report fraud attempts to Action Fraud (or 101 in Scotland).
  • If money or details were given, contact your bank immediately on 159 and report to Action Fraud.

How to block and report 01942 943360

Block 01942 943360 on your phone

On iPhone: open Phone → Recents, tap the ⓘ next to 01942 943360 and choose Block this Caller. On Android: open Phone → Recents, tap the number and choose Block/report spam. Landline customers of BT, Sky, TalkTalk and Virgin Media can enable free network-level call screening in their provider's app, which stops the call before the phone ever rings.

Report 01942 943360 to the authorities

Report scam calls to Action Fraud (England, Wales & NI) or call 101 in Scotland. Persistent nuisance or silent calls go to Ofcom, and unlawful marketing calls to the ICO. Scam texts can be forwarded free to 7726. Registering with the Telephone Preference Service (tpsonline.org.uk) cuts legitimate UK marketing calls.

Related numbers people checked

Other numbers in the same 01942 range that UK users have recently looked up:

About 01942 numbers

A common UK scam pattern uses blocks like 01942 943 XXX for 'tech support' calls: a caller claims to be from Microsoft, BT, or your antivirus provider, and tries to get you to install remote-access software. No legitimate UK tech-support team will phone you out of the blue and ask to take control of your computer.

See the full picture for this range on the 01942 943 XXX block page or the 01942 (Wigan) area code page.

Frequently asked questions about 01942 943360

Who called me from 01942 943360?

01942 943360 sits in an Ofcom-allocated number block held by Voxbone SA, associated with Wigan. No community reports have been filed for it yet — if it called you, you can add the first report on this page and help the next person who searches it.

Is 01942 943360 a scam number?

There are currently no scam reports for 01942 943360 on this site, but absence of reports is not a guarantee — scam campaigns rotate numbers constantly. Judge any unexpected call by its behaviour: urgency, requests for security details, or unusual payment methods are the warning signs.

Where is 01942 943360 calling from?

01942 943360 is associated with Wigan in the UK numbering plan. Bear in mind VoIP routing means a geographic number can technically be answered anywhere, and spoofed caller IDs can misuse real local numbers — so treat the location as an indicator, not a certainty.

How do I block calls from 01942 943360?

On iPhone or Android, open your recent calls, tap 01942 943360 and choose 'Block this caller'. Landline customers of BT, Sky, TalkTalk and Virgin Media can enable free network-level call screening in their provider's app. To cut legitimate marketing calls, register free with the Telephone Preference Service at tpsonline.org.uk.

Should I call 01942 943360 back?

Only if you recognise it or were expecting the call. Returning unknown missed calls is exactly what 'wangiri' one-ring scams rely on, and some call-back traps route to premium-rate lines. Look the number up first (you're in the right place), and if it matters, the caller will leave a voicemail or try again.

Check another UK number

Free, no sign-up. We don't share your search. Powered by Ofcom data, refreshed weekly.