Who called me from a Hyperoptic number?

Hyperoptic is a UK fixed-line network operator. Look up any of its 78 Ofcom-allocated number blocks below.

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Provider
Hyperoptic
Type
Fixed-line network operator
Allocated blocks
78
Website
Official site

Hyperoptic is a UK fixed-line network operator. That means Ofcom has allocated Hyperoptic one or more blocks of UK telephone numbers under the National Telephone Numbering Plan, which Hyperoptic can either use for its own customers or sub-allocate to resellers and downstream providers. In total, Hyperoptic currently holds 78 allocated number blocks in our copy of the Ofcom plan.

Hyperoptic's number ranges are concentrated in (020) (London), 01273 (Brighton), 0161 (Manchester), 01753 (Slough). Across all of its allocations the split is roughly 78 geographic landline blocks. You can use the tables below to jump straight to a specific Hyperoptic area code or number block and see the common call patterns reported for it.

The oldest Hyperoptic number block in the Ofcom data was allocated in 2016, and the most recent in 2026. Allocation dates matter because a number that has been live for many years is more likely to be a settled business or residential line, whereas a very recently-allocated block is more commonly seen in VoIP and virtual-number services — the kind sometimes used for short-lived marketing or scam campaigns.

Is a Hyperoptic number safe to answer? In most cases, yes — the overwhelming majority of calls from any UK provider's range are ordinary, legitimate calls. However, two things are important to understand. First, because Hyperoptic can sub-allocate or resell its numbers, the fact that a number sits in a Hyperoptic block does not mean Hyperoptic itself is calling you. Second, UK caller IDs can be spoofed: scammers can make a call appear to come from a Hyperoptic number they don't control. So treat the number as a clue, not proof — judge the call on what the caller actually asks for.

If a Hyperoptic number called you and you're unsure, don't share security details, bank information or one-time passcodes, and don't return the call until you've verified it independently. You can block the specific number on any UK smartphone from the recent-calls list, enable free network-level call screening through your own landline provider, and register with the Telephone Preference Service (TPS) to cut legitimate marketing calls. Persistent nuisance calls can be reported to Ofcom, and suspected scams to Action Fraud (or Police Scotland on 101).

Where Hyperoptic numbers are based

The area codes where Hyperoptic holds the most Ofcom-allocated number blocks. Click an area to see every block and the call patterns reported there.

Area codeLocationTypeBlocks
(020) London Geographic 12
01273 Brighton Geographic 2
0161 Manchester Geographic 2
01753 Slough Geographic 2
01923 Watford Geographic 2
(023) Southampton & Portsmouth Geographic 2
(024) Coventry Geographic 2
0113 Leeds Geographic 1
0114 Sheffield Geographic 1
0115 Nottingham Geographic 1
0116 Leicester Geographic 1
0117 Bristol Geographic 1
0118 Reading Geographic 1
01202 Bournemouth Geographic 1
01206 Colchester Geographic 1

Example Hyperoptic number blocks

A sample of individual number blocks allocated to Hyperoptic. Each links to a full guide for that block:

FAQs about Hyperoptic numbers

Is a Hyperoptic number safe to answer?

A Hyperoptic number is usually a normal, legitimate UK line — Hyperoptic is an Ofcom-licensed fixed-line network operator. But because numbers can be resold and caller IDs can be spoofed, you should still judge each call on its content: hang up on anyone who pressures you, asks for security details or one-time passcodes, or wants remote access to your device.

Does a Hyperoptic number mean Hyperoptic is calling me?

Not necessarily. Hyperoptic allocates numbers to its own customers and often sub-allocates ranges to resellers and downstream providers, so the organisation actually calling you may be a completely different business using a Hyperoptic-allocated number. Number spoofing can also make an unrelated caller appear to use a Hyperoptic number.

How many UK numbers does Hyperoptic have?

Hyperoptic currently holds 78 Ofcom-allocated number blocks in our copy of the National Telephone Numbering Plan. Each block typically covers 1,000 or 10,000 individual numbers, so the real count of usable numbers is far higher.

How do I block and report a Hyperoptic number?

On most UK smartphones, open your recent calls, tap the number and choose 'Block this caller'. UK landline providers (BT, Sky, TalkTalk, Virgin Media) offer free call screening you can switch on in their app. Report nuisance calls to Ofcom, scam calls to Action Fraud, and forward scam texts free to 7726. You can also register with the TPS at tpsonline.org.uk to stop legitimate marketing calls.