Por Equipo NoCall

What is vishing: how to spot phone scams in Spain

Vishing (voice + phishing) is one of the most dangerous and common phone scams in Spain. Criminals pretend to be your bank, Correos, or Social Security to steal personal data and money. The NoCall community has flagged more than 65 459 numbers linked to spam and scams, with 0 reports today alone.

65 459
Numéros de spam détectés
0
Signalements de la communauté
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Signalements aujourd'hui

How does vishing work?

Vishing is a form of social engineering. Scammers research victims beforehand (data breaches, social media, or bought marketing lists) and call with partly real information to win your trust. The goal is to get data they do not have yet: passwords, SMS verification codes, or card details.

They often use caller ID spoofing so your phone shows your bank's real number. That makes the scam especially hard to spot.

Common vishing tactics in Spain

Fake bank call

They say there is a suspicious charge or unauthorised access to your account. They ask you to "verify your identity" with your password, PIN, or SMS code. In reality they use that code to authorise a transfer from your account.

Example: "Hello, we are calling from the security department of [bank]. We detected a suspicious transaction of €1,200. To cancel it, we need you to confirm the code we just sent by SMS."

Fake Social Security / tax authority

They impersonate Social Security or the tax agency. They mention a pending refund or a problem with your benefit and ask for bank details to "process the refund" or "regularise your situation".

Example: "We inform you that you have a €325 refund pending from Social Security. To process it, we need your bank account number."

Correos / parcel scam

They say a parcel is held at customs and you must pay a fee. They send a link or ask for card details by phone. Correos does not collect fees that way over the phone.

Fake tech support

They claim your router, PC, or internet line has a problem. They want you to install remote-access software or give access to online banking. Movistar, Vodafone, and other carriers do not call customers like this out of the blue.

"Relative in trouble" call

Someone pretends to be your child from a new number, saying they lost their phone and need money urgently. Always verify by calling your relative on a number you already trust.

How to protect yourself from vishing

1. Be wary of urgency

Scammers create pressure so you cannot think clearly. No legitimate process requires an instant phone decision. If they rush you, treat it as a red flag.

2. Never give sensitive data by phone

Your bank will never ask for passwords, PINs, SMS codes, or full card details by phone. No public body will ask for banking data that way either. If they do, it is vishing.

3. Hang up and call back yourself

If you have doubts, hang up and call the organisation's official number (from its website or your card). Do not use the number they gave you on the call or the number on your screen — it may be spoofed.

4. Check the number on NoCall

Search our database with more than 65 459 identified numbers. If the number was already reported as a scam, you will see it right away.

5. Turn on automatic blocking

With the NoCall app, numbers reported as vishing by the community can be blocked automatically on your phone — you may not even receive the call.

Protect yourself from vishing with NoCall

Automatically block numbers linked to phone scams before they reach you.

Download NoCall

If you fell for vishing

  1. Contact your bank immediately. Block compromised cards and accounts. Ask to reverse any fraudulent transactions.
  2. Change your passwords. If you shared online-banking or other credentials, change them at once from a trusted device.
  3. Report to the police. Go to a Policía Nacional station or Guardia Civil post with details: caller number, time, what they said, and what you shared.
  4. Call 017 (INCIBE). Spain's national cybersecurity helpline is free and confidential and can guide you on next steps.
  5. Report the number on NoCall. Your report helps protect others who might get the same call.

Check a suspicious number

Did you get a suspicious vishing call? See whether the number was already reported:

Questions fréquentes

Qu'est-ce que le vishing ?+

Le vishing (voix + phishing) est une arnaque téléphonique où des criminels appellent en se faisant passer pour une organisation de confiance — comme votre banque, Correos ou la Sécurité sociale — afin de voler des données personnelles, mots de passe ou coordonnées bancaires.

Comment puis-je repérer un appel de vishing ?+

Les signaux d'alerte courants sont : une fausse urgence (« votre compte va être bloqué »), des demandes de données sensibles (mots de passe, code PIN, codes SMS), des menaces ou une pression pour agir vite, et des demandes d'installer des applications ou de faire des virements. Aucune banque ni organisme officiel ne demandera de détails confidentiels par téléphone.

Que dois-je faire si je suis tombé dans le piège du vishing ?+

Contactez immédiatement votre banque pour bloquer les comptes et cartes compromis. Changez tous les mots de passe que vous avez partagés. Signalez-le à la Police nationale ou à la Garde civile. Appelez le 017 (INCIBE) pour des conseils gratuits en cybersécurité. Signalez le numéro sur NoCall pour aider à protéger les autres.

Ma banque peut-elle m'appeler et me demander mes informations ?+

Non. Aucune banque espagnole ne demandera jamais de mots de passe, codes PIN, codes de vérification SMS ou numéros de carte complets par téléphone. Si vous recevez un tel appel, c'est une arnaque. Raccrochez et appelez vous-même le numéro officiel de votre banque.

Recherchez un numéro de téléphone espagnol ou un nom d'entreprise (Iberdrola, Movistar...) pour vérifier s'il a été signalé comme spam.

Qu'est-ce que le vishing : comment repérer les arnaques téléphoniques en Espagne | NoCall