8009452000

800 area code: Toll-free
Read comments below about 8009452000. Report unwanted calls to help identify who is using this phone number.
  • 0
    Ima Dumas
    It was a nice young man - John I believe, from Card Services.  Since I have been paying my Bille, he was able to lower my interest rate to zero!  I gave him the numbers for 5 of my cards...I'm going to saving so much money...thank you John!
    • Caller: zero interest
    • Call type: Scam suspicion
  • 0
    FedUp
    Received a call on my cellphone from 1-800-945-2000.
    I didn't bother to answer it.
    Read a few previous posts claiming it's from Chase Bank.
    I have just ONE credit card and it's NOT from Chase.
    I don't use my cellphone for business matters.
    Not even my job has my cellphone number.
    • Caller: Not Available
  • 0
    aditi
    | 1 reply
    as stated below caller id showed call was from experian.  when i answered no one on the line.
    • Caller: experian
  • +1
    Kat* replies to aditi
    So scammers pretending to be Experian are now spoofing a Chase phone number? Yet further proof they are none too bright.
  • 0
    SNtD
    I hung up the instant I heard the automated nonsense about credit card rates. I can see this trash group has been doing this for over a decade now. Get a real job, you uneducated losers.
    • Call type: Scam suspicion
  • 0
    Jim Jones
    Robo spam
    • Caller: Robo spam
    • Call type: Silent call
  • 0
    Jaden
    Robo Scam bank fraud scam
    • Caller: Scammer
    • Call type: Scam suspicion
  • -2
    Just a point of information
    | 2 replies
    The Caller Box on the post is meant for the Caller ID name (the 1st line on your phone display). I know it seems like it's for want you want to call the caller. But there is a link at the bottom of each page ' ... summary and related issues' right above 'Report a phone call from ...' that if you click on it, gives a frequency distribution chart of all calls by Caller ID. Since the phone number in your display (the 2nd line or the 2nd page) is frequently changed from what it really is by Caller ID spoofing, the Caller ID name(CNAM) can often be more of any indication of the nature of the scammers' operations. So the actual CNAM can be useful in the site. I'm not obsessive about doing it this way. Expressive phrases help relived people's frustrations. I just wanted to point out its intended use.
    • Caller: Nobody
  • 0
    Bill
    | 1 reply
    Foreign criminal scum spoofing a Chase 'incoming' phone number running a typical credit card scam.
    Dozens (or hundreds) of call centers are using this same recorded scam - you can buy or lease it with your robo-dialing equipment, along with many other standard scams.
    There are about 1/3 Million call centers operating in India.
    Some are real customer service centers, but a significant fraction are dedicated to overseas telephone fraud.  About 60 Billion robocalls last year to U.S. numbers via the internet - and climbing.
    The person you talk to is just someone that needed a job, but is working for organized criminal scum.
    They care nothing about U.S. laws, and India enjoys the revenue.
    Only aggressive action by Congress and new telecommunication technology can slow this down.
    • Call type: Scam suspicion
  • 0
    Kat* replies to Bill
    Why would they buy or lease it when they can record it themselves for free?
  • -4
    Michelle
    | 2 replies
    This is a valid chase number. This number can be found on your chase credit card statement.
    • Caller: Chase
  • +3
    Tygerkat replies to Michelle
    it may be "a valid Chase number" but that doesn't mean it's actually Chase calling. If you;d bothered to read any of the other posts in this thread you would have learned the number has been spoofed by scammers.
  • +2
    Martin L replies to Michelle
    These crooks can replace the phone # you see on your Caller ID which normally is set by the caller's phone with any number they want using a technique called Caller ID spoofing. It is very widespread and easy to do. They especially like to spoof the numbers that you see on big companies websites. They can pretend to be that company. In this case, they spoofed Chase Bank's customer service representative # from their site. As a point of information, companies never use their CSR # to make outgoing calls to call up customers. So rest assured, this call is a fake. You can check the Chase site to read about the various frauds to look out for.
  • +1
    WhiteHat replies to Dustin
    | 1 reply
    This is a phishing call. It is not from Chase credit card despite what your caller ID says. This is a total fraud.
  • +2
    Tygerkat replies to WhiteHat
    Your reply is 12 years too late and had been stated countless times in those 12 years anyway.
  • +2
    Resident47 replies to Just a point of information
    | 1 reply
    } The Caller Box on the post is meant for the Caller ID name

    The instructional blurb below that input field prompts for "the company that called you", not what Caller ID reads. Those two items can be very different, I'm sure you're aware. I'd agree that CNAM can be of value, given that it can vary by carrier and also as an indicator of abuse of caller authentication. If a commentor knows something of a dodgy caller's true and hidden identity, I'd favor that as the "caller" entry. A pattern match in the site's database to that call source is of greater value than a Caller ID string, ultimately a disposable fact. 800Notes was created to do more than parrot phone metadata, mainly to help us unmask our electronic tormentors.
  • +1
    BigA replies to Resident47
    For a point of reference, that one posts under multiple screen names.  Its signature is referencing the blue link at the bottom of the thread to see the other numbers.  Some of the names it goes by:  Mary, Nancy, Margaret, LostinLA, ShouldaKnown, Getting wise, Raoul
  • 0
    jasper
    | 1 reply
    Credit card reduction scam. Recorded voice of woman asking you to press 1 to be connected to reduce your interest rate.  Nobody should fall for this nonsense and the phone companies are not doing enough to stop this.
    • Call type: Scam suspicion
  • +2
    Tygerkat replies to jasper
    What, exactly, do you think the phone companies can do about scam calls from overseas?
  • 0
    RIck
    Male voice robocalled and said we would be charged $300 for anti-virus protection unless we cancelled within 48 Hrs. Caller ID said "Chase Card Services" (Guess they forgot to change that).  Apparently their latest scam..
    • Caller: Chase Card Services
    • Call type: Scam suspicion

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