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Generate realistic fake phone numbers for software testing, UI mockups, verification placeholders, and privacy protection. No signup required.
Whether you’re a developer testing phone‑field validation, a UI designer populating a contact card, or a QA engineer running form‑filling scripts, a fake phone number generator saves time and protects real personal data.
A temporary phone number generator like Pradoy helps you fill mobile app mockups, test international input validation (E.164), and generate random mobile numbers for seed databases without exposing real user data.
"Generate numbers that look authentic but are strictly meant for placeholder use — never for spam or deception."
| Country | Code | Example Format |
|---|---|---|
| United States / Canada (NANP) | +1 | +1 555‑010‑1234 |
| United Kingdom | +44 | +44 20 7946 0000 |
| Australia | +61 | +61 2 5550 0000 |
| Japan | +81 | +81 3 5550 0000 |
| India | +91 | +91 98765 43210 |
All numbers use reserved fictional ranges (e.g., 555‑01xx) to prevent accidental dialing.
Select from 25+ supported locales with native formatting rules.
Select E.164 (international), national/local, or mobile-specific.
Creates a valid‑structured, random fake number in one click.
Paste into your mockups, test scripts, or documentation assets.
Our algorithm respects official digit rules (e.g., US numbers never start with 0 or 1, UK mobile numbers always start with 07) for maximum realism.
These are dummy phone numbers only — they cannot receive SMS, phone calls, or verification codes. For genuine SMS verification testing, use sanctioned sandbox environments.
Never use a fake phone number for verification of production accounts; doing so may violate the terms of service and could be illegal.
Pradoy’s tool is strictly a mock data utility for harmless, legal uses. Use generated numbers only for design, education, and testing.
Yes, when used for legitimate testing, design, and education. Illegal use includes fraud, harassment, or impersonation. Always label as mock data.
No. These are synthetically formatted strings with no telephony backend. For functional testing, use official sandbox tools.
The 555 prefix (555-0100 through 555-0199) is reserved by NANPA for fictional use, making it safe for mockups and movies.
E.164 is the international standard (+country subscriber). It's required by most APIs and SMS gateways for proper routing.
We recommend Google's libphonenumber library. It's the industry standard for parsing and validating numbers across 200+ regions.
Yes. Use the bulk generation feature to create CSV or JSON exports for large-scale database seeding.
Yes, especially when using masked formats or clearly fictional ranges like 555. Always verify before publishing.