What consumers report about 877 toll-free numbers, and how to spot the most common patterns.
Low recent activity
Based on consumer reports filed with the FTC over the past 90 days.
Few or no consumer reports in the past 30 days. Most calls from this entity may be legitimate.
Past 30 days
0
Past 90 days
2
All time
2
Most-reported subjects
Calls pretending to be government, businesses, or family and friends
Source: FTC Do Not Call Reported Calls dataset. The FTC notes the underlying complaints are submitted by consumers and are not independently verified.
Why 877 is attractive to scammers
Toll-free codes look professional. A 877 prefix can suggest a bank, shipping company, or government agency — exactly what imposter scams rely on. Scammers can display a 877 prefix through caller-ID spoofing whether or not they own a real877 number.
Most-reported 877 subjects
Recent FTC complaints about 877-prefixed numbers most often reference: Calls pretending to be government, businesses, or family and friends. Common imposter angles include refund offers, debt-relief pitches, extended-warranty calls, and account-verification requests.
How to handle an unexpected 877 call
Don't engage. Don't press buttons in response to prompts. Hang up and contact the organization directly through a number you find on their official website — not the number that called you. If the call asked for personal information, treat it as a scam by default.
Last updated 2026-05-02. Source: FTC Do Not Call Reported Calls dataset (consumer-submitted, unverified).