A number starting with 08 is not automatically suspicious. In France, some special-service numbers are free, others are billed like a standard call, and a third category adds a premium charge. The real risk does not come from the 08 prefix alone, but from calling back without checking a number received through SMS, voicemail, or a click-to-call link.
For sales teams, customer support teams, and consumers alike, the right reflex is to distinguish three situations: free number, standard-rate number, or premium-rate number. That simple distinction helps avoid billing surprises and makes it easier to detect scam scenarios.
Not all 08 numbers mean the same thing
According to ARCEP, French 10-digit special-service numbers starting with 08 fall into three main groups:
- 0800 to 0805: free numbers;
- 0806 to 0809: standard-rate numbers, usually billed like a normal call and often included in mobile plans;
- 081, 082, and 089: premium-rate numbers that may generate extra charges.
This matters because the shortcut “all 08 numbers are a trap” is simply wrong. Still, some 08 numbers can be used in fraudulent schemes when people are pushed to call back in a hurry.
There are also short numbers that may be premium-rate, including some 4-digit numbers starting with 10 or between 32 and 39, as well as 6-digit numbers starting with 118. Here again, you should verify the associated service before calling.
The simple visual rule: green, grey, purple
France uses a color-based pricing signal:
- green: free number;
- grey: standard-rate call;
- purple: premium-rate number.
This color code is practical. It helps you understand whether a service adds a specific charge before you call. If that information is missing or unclear in an ad, an SMS, or a web page, caution is justified.
Which warning signs should slow you down?
Service-Public and DGCCRF highlight three common situations that require extra caution:
- An SMS or voicemail asks you to call back an unknown number because of a parcel issue, administrative emergency, prize, or account problem;
- A website offers an instant call button without clearly explaining the price;
- A service billed through your telecom invoice appears without a clear and intentional action on your side.
In other words, the danger often comes less from the number itself than from the pressure scenario: urgency, reward, fear, or confusion.
A practical checklist before calling an 08 number back
- Check whether the number falls into 0800-0805, 0806-0809, or 081/082/089.
- Use Surmafacture to identify the service provider, pricing, and contact details.
- Never call back in a rush when the number came from an alarming SMS or a vague voicemail.
- If you already manage high volumes of inbound calls, put in place an internal instant verification process or read our guide on how to check a suspicious number.
- If the pattern looks like mobile phishing, see our analysis on why scams are shifting toward SMS spam.
What you should hear at the start of the call
When calling a premium-rate number, a pricing information message must be played at the beginning of the call. According to Service-Public, that message itself is free of charge. This is a very concrete checkpoint: if pricing is not clearly announced, you have stronger grounds to challenge or report the situation.
For businesses, this transparency also matters in customer relations. After-sales support or complaint handling cannot rely on just any premium-rate number. ARCEP reminds users that some uses are restricted by consumer law.
What to do if you are unsure or already facing an abnormal bill
First step: identify the service through ARCEP’s guidance on SVA numbers or through Surmafacture. If you dispute premium-rate calls on your bill, ARCEP advises users to contact the service publisher first using the contact details listed in the directory, and then contact the telecom operator if the answer is unsatisfactory.
If the call or message was unsolicited, you can also report it to 33700. And when the issue comes from missing pricing disclosure or a misleading practice, Service-Public points users to the appropriate reporting channels.
Why this topic also affects phone reputation
Premium-rate numbers are not the same thing as classic telemarketing spam, but they share one consequence: they damage trust in phone calls. The more users face callback traps, vague messages, or hidden costs, the more reluctant they become to answer or return legitimate calls.
For organizations calling at scale, that broader distrust eventually hurts answer rates, customer relationships, and line reputation. That is why verification, transparency, and traceability matter well beyond the narrow issue of 08 numbers.












