Last reviewed: 2026. This page is only for safe network or operator checking. It does not provide any private SIM owner information.
Privacy notice: This page does not show the owner, CNIC, address, family details, call records, WhatsApp info, or live location for any mobile number. It only explains how the 76367 network check helps you find the current network or operator of a Pakistani mobile number. See our Privacy Policy.
Data notice: checksimsownership.com.pk does not store CNICs, phone numbers, OTPs, SIM numbers, or identity documents.
Quick answer:The 76367 network check tells you the current network or operator for any Pakistani mobile number. Open your SMS app, type N, add a space, then enter the full 11-digit number, and send it to 76367. For example: N 03001234567. The reply will show only the current operator. It will not show the owner’s name, CNIC, or address. Standard SMS charges may apply, so check the current rate with your operator.
For safe, official SIM verification guidance in Pakistan, the SIM owner details Pakistan guide covers the full picture.
The Prefix Rule That Breaks After Porting
For years, Pakistanis had a handy shortcut that’s easy enough – look at the first four digits of a mobile number, and you know the carrier. 0300 is Jazz, 0311 is Zong, 0345 is Telenor, and 0333 is Ufone.
This was a good shortcut, but only worked for the first or original mobile network. That only tells you who actually assigned the number originally. When looking at a number, there is no way of knowing who that number is actually being operated by, or who the mobile carrier actually is.
Some mobile number portability (MNP) was introduced in Pakistan in 2007. MNP allows you to keep your number while you switch mobile networks. In Pakistan, a person can have a Jazz number that is 0300, and can switch to Ufone or Telenor, etc., and that number will still be a Jazz number. Everyone still sees that the number is a Jazz number, but that number, or number prefix, is actually on a completely different mobile network.
Because of this, people in Pakistan have many reasons to become very annoyed and frustrated on a daily basis.
You call Jazz and complain about a 0300 number. Jazz has no record of this number because that number was ported to Zong. You buy a Jazz on-net call bundle because you think the 0300 number is on Jazz, but in reality that number has been on Telenor since 2022. You go to a Telenor store to help you with a 0345 number, but that number has been ported to Ufone, and the store has no record of it.
After Number Portability, the prefix can no longer relay the amount of information it previously could.
To address this problem, a network check (76367) is conducted.
Use 76367 Network Check When the Prefix No Longer Tells the Truth
The 76367 network check is a network identification service. It confirms the current active operator of any Pakistani mobile number, not by the prefix, but by using live network data.
Even if a number has been ported one or more times, the 76367 network check shows the network it is currently using. This makes it the most reliable way to confirm which operator to contact, which helpline to call, and which bundles will work for on-net rates.
This is confirmed by multiple authoritative sources, including references from the CNIC.sims.pk portal, which lists 76367 as a supported network identification method.
How to Use 76367 Network Check
The steps are straightforward.
- Open your SMS app on any Pakistani mobile phone.
- Type the letter N
- Add one space
- Type the full 11-digit mobile number you want to check (starting with 03)
- Send this message to 76367
Example message to send: N 03001234567
You can send this from any active Pakistani SIM, including Jazz, Zong, Telenor, Ufone, ONIC, or SCO/SCOM. You do not need internet access, an app, or to enter your own CNIC or any personal information. Standard SMS charges may apply. The exact rate can vary by operator and may change over time. Verify the current charge with your mobile operator before using the service.
You should receive a reply within seconds. The reply shows the current network for the number you sent.
What Comes Back in the 76367 Network Check Reply
The 76367 network check reply shows the current active network/operator for the number you queried. That is all it returns.
What 76367 Network Check Can and Cannot Show
Being specific about this protects you from expecting something this method does not deliver — and from being misled by websites that overclaim what it does.
What 76367 Network Check Helps With
- Finding the current network/operator of any Pakistani mobile number
- Confirming whether a number has been ported through MNP
- Choosing the correct operator helpline before making a complaint call
- Verifying a number’s network before activating on-net call or data bundles
- Checking which franchise to visit for an operator-related issue
- Identifying the right network before sending a balance to a number
What 76367 Network Check Does Not Show
- The registered owner’s name
- Any CNIC linked to the number
- The owner’s home address
- Family details or relationships
- Call records or message history.
- WhatsApp activity, contacts, or groups
- The live location of the phone or its user
- Banking details or transaction records
- Private SIM database records of any kind
If a website or person claims that the 76367 network check can reveal an owner’s name or CNIC, that claim is incorrect. The method was not designed for identity lookup. It is a network identification tool and nothing more.
A Network Check Is Not an Owner Check
This distinction matters because many users come to “check network by number Pakistan” searches, hoping to find the caller’s name or other personal details. That is an understandable impulse after receiving a threatening or suspicious call. But the 76367 network check does not go that far — and for good reason.
What you learn from the 76367 network check is the operator. That information is genuinely useful. Once you know the operator, you can:
- Contact that operator’s official support channel and report the number.
- File a formal complaint through the correct PTA-aligned route.
- Use the PTA complaint portal for persistent harassment cases.
- Contact the FIA Cybercrime Wing if the matter involves fraud or criminal threats.
None of these next steps requires the private name or CNIC of the caller. Official agencies have legal access to subscriber records when a formal complaint is filed. You do not need to retrieve that information yourself, and unofficial platforms that claim to provide it are not connected to real PTA data. [Citation needed]
Pick the Right Method: 76367, 667, 668, or cnic.sims.pk
Pakistani users often ask which method they should use. The answer depends on what they are actually trying to find out. The four main official methods serve four distinct purposes, and using the wrong one leads to dead ends.
| Need to know the current network of any number | 76367 network check | Current operator name only | This page |
| Want to verify who the SIM in your hand is registered to | 667 | Owner name on the SIM physically in your phone | 667 sim information |
| Want to see all SIMs registered on your own CNIC | 668 | Operator-wise SIM count on your own CNIC | 668 SIM check guide |
| Want a full browser-based SIM list on your CNIC | cnic.sims.pk | Complete SIM list with details per number | CNIC SIM check guide |
Common mistake 1: Using the 76367 network check when the actual need is to see all SIMs on a CNIC. These are completely different actions. If the concern is “how many SIMs are on my CNIC,” the right tool is 668 or cnic.sims.pk.
Common mistake 2: Using the 76367 network check when someone wants to confirm the registered name on a SIM they just received. For that specific situation, the right tool is 667 — send MNP to 667 from the SIM physically in your phone.
Common mistake 3: Assuming the 76367 network check result reveals private identity information. It does not. The result is limited to the operator name.
Ported Numbers Can Break Old Prefix Logic — Why This Happens
To see why the 76367 network check matters, we should look at how MNP works in Pakistan.
When people port their numbers, they go through a series of biometric checks performed by the new service network provider. After successful verification, the number is ported to the new service provider. The portability database of the new service network provider updates to send incoming calls to the new network.
The number does not change. The new service provider still uses the same prefix. For Telenor, the number remains the same, 0345, but now uses the Jazz infrastructure. Anyone looking at the number from a network outside Jazz and Telenor will see it remains as a Telenor number.
The prefix logic creates confusion and frustration for service networks users in a few scenarios.
For a Telenor On-Net bundle, it will be assumed that a 0345 contact is also on Telenor. However, if they have ported to Ufone, that will result in an off-net call. The true network would be revealed by a quick 76367 service check before purchasing the bundle.
For a Telenor service network user needing to report a suspicious number, they will most likely reach the wrong service helpline by calling based on the prefix logic. That helpline cannot assist the request because the number is no longer with them. A quick check of 76367 would solve both examples in a matter of seconds.
Using prefix logic is important when making franchise visits. Without it, or in the case of multiple prefixes, for example, if you had to visit the franchise of multiple network providers to solve a problem, you could end up wasting time making unnecessary trips. But with the network check 76367, you can check what network your SIM is using so you can make the necessary visit only once.
Using prefix logic is even more critical now that Jazz has merged with Warid. Warid Telecom numbers were merged with Jazz in 2016-2017 and, as a result, many former Warid numbers are now Jazz numbers. However, there is an issue with those numbers. Those former Warid numbers are now ported to different service providers and those prefixes will tell you Warid and Jazz, but they will not tell you what other service providers those numbers are currently assigned to.
Which Networks Does 76367 Network Check Identify
The 76367 network check is designed to work across all active Pakistani mobile operators. This covers every network currently licensed by PTA and operating in Pakistan.
Jazz (Including Former Warid Numbers)
Jazz is Pakistan’s largest mobile operator. Jazz-assigned prefixes include the 030x and 032x ranges. The 032x range was originally Warid Telecom before the merger in 2016–2017, which means a number like 0321 or 0325 now falls under Jazz. However, many of these numbers have been ported to other operators since the merger. Always use the 76367 network check to confirm the current operator rather than assuming from the prefix.
Zong
Zong, operated by China Mobile Pakistan, uses the 031x prefix range. Zong numbers can be and frequently are ported to other networks, especially by users switching to competitors for better data packages or coverage in their area. A 0311 or 0315 prefix is originally Zong, but the 76367 network check will show whether it still is.
Telenor
Telenor Pakistan uses the 034x prefix range. A significant operator change is worth noting: in October 2025, PTCL’s acquisition of Telenor Pakistan was formally approved, with Telenor’s subscribers and infrastructure moving under the Ufone network. For the most current operator name and support routes for Telenor-prefix numbers, verify with official sources. The 76367 network check will reflect whatever the current registered operator is for any 034x number.
Ufone
Ufone uses the 033x prefix range. Ufone numbers can be ported out to Jazz, Zong, or other networks. The 76367 network check is reliable for confirming whether any 033x number is still on Ufone or has moved to another operator.
ONIC
ONIC (Pakistan’s newest licensed operator as of 2024) uses the 037x prefix range. This is a newer range that many users may not recognize immediately. If you receive a number starting with 0370, 0371, or another 037x code, the 76367 network check will confirm the current operator. Because ONIC is newer, prefix recognition is still low — making the 76367 network check especially useful for 037x numbers.
SCO/SCOM
SCO (Special Communications Organization, also known as SCOM) primarily operates in Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan. For the latest details on whether 76367 network check covers SCO/SCOM numbers in these regions, verify from official operator support or PTA, as regional availability may vary.
For any operator, verify the latest support routes, contact numbers, and complaint procedures directly from official operator sources. Operator structures and support channels can change, particularly given recent merger and acquisition activity in Pakistan’s telecom sector.
When 76367 Network Check Is the Right First Step
There are specific, clear situations where 76367 network check is the right starting point before taking any further action.
Before Contacting Operator Support
You receive a suspicious or harassing call. The first thing you need to know is which operator to contact. Calling the wrong helpline means starting over. A 76367 network check on the number gives you the correct current operator in seconds, so your first call or first visit goes to the right place.
When You Are Not Sure Which Network a Number Is On
Someone gives you a number to save. They say it is on a particular network. You want to confirm before you buy an on-net bundle or activate a specific package. The 76367 network check confirms it immediately without relying on what the prefix looks like.
Before Activating On-Net Bundles
On-net rates in Pakistan are almost always cheaper than off-net rates. If you buy an on-net package but the target number is on a different network, you pay full off-net rates for every call and message. A 76367 network check takes seconds and can save a meaningful amount over time for regular callers.
When a SIM Is Handed to You Before Purchase
Before buying a used SIM or accepting a SIM from someone, the 76367 network check tells you which network it currently belongs to. For the registered owner’s name on that SIM, use 667 separately — that is a different check with a different method.
After a Number Has Been Ported
If someone tells you they recently ported their number to a new network, the 76367 network check can confirm the port is complete and the number is now showing on the new network. One source notes that post-MNP, the 76367 network check reflects the new operator within a reasonable timeframe — but verify this directly with your operator for the latest processing timeframes.
When 76367 Network Check Is Not the Answer
The 76367 network check is focused on one specific thing. There are many common Pakistani telecom problems it cannot help with, and using the wrong method wastes time.
If your concern is SIMs registered on your CNIC: The 76367 network check does not show anything about your own CNIC registration. Use the 668 SIM check guide to see a count of SIMs on your CNIC by operator, or the CNIC SIM check guide for the full browser-based list.
If your concern is the registered name on a SIM in your hand: Use the 667 sim information method. Send MNP to 667 from the SIM physically in your phone.
If your concern is biometric verification status: Contact your operator’s official support or visit an authorized franchise with your original CNIC.
If your concern is a fraud complaint or identity misuse: Start with the PTA complaint portal for telecom issues. For fraud, financial crime, or cybercrime, use the FIA Cybercrime Wing’s official channel.
📌 If the concern involves SIM fraud prevention more broadly, read the SIM fraud prevention guide next.
What to Do After the 76367 Network Check Result Comes Back
Getting the result is step one. What you do next depends on why you needed to know the operator in the first place.
You Received a Fraud or Harassment Call
- Note the current network from the 76367 network check result
- Contact that operator’s official support helpline
- Report the number using the operator’s spam or harassment complaint process
- If the operator’s response is not satisfactory, use the PTA complaint portal
- For fraud, blackmail, financial threats, or electronic crime, contact the FIA Cybercrime Wing through their official portal
Do not contact WhatsApp agents, private lookup services, or fake SIM database websites. These services are not connected to PTA records. The data they return is either fabricated or sourced from old breaches. Using them risks exposing your CNIC and phone number to further misuse.
You Needed to Buy the Right Bundle
Once you know the current network from the 76367 network check, visit that operator’s official app, website, or dial the correct USSD bundle code. Always activate bundles through official operator channels only.
The 76367 Network Check Result Was Unexpected
If the 76367 network check shows a network that surprises you, do not assume the tool is wrong. First, verify by checking the original prefix against MNP history. Then contact the shown operator’s official support for confirmation. Take action based on what the official support confirms — not based on assumptions.
Your Issue Is Actually About SIMs on Your CNIC
If the 76367 network check result makes you realize the actual problem is about SIMs registered on your identity, stop and use the right tool. Go to the CNIC SIM check guide to check all SIMs registered on your own CNIC through official methods.
Fake SIM Owner Websites Are Not 76367 Network Check Tools
When Pakistani users search for “check network by number” or “76367 network check,” they sometimes land on websites that look like legitimate checking tools but are not.
These websites typically:
- Display a search bar and a loading animation to look official
- Ask you to enter a mobile number, then prompt for your own CNIC or an OTP
- Show a result with a fabricated name, address, and fake CNIC
- Claim the result came from PTA or a “live database”
- Offer a “premium” service to reveal more details for payment
- Redirect users to WhatsApp agents who charge fees for private SIM lookups
- Copy official logos or website designs to appear legitimate
None of these websites are connected to PTA’s systems. The “76367 network check results” they show are either made up, copied from old public data, or randomly generated. The names and addresses they display belong to real people but have nothing to do with the number you entered.
What actually happens when you use these sites:
- Your mobile number is recorded and added to spam marketing databases
- Your CNIC (if entered) is collected for resale to data brokers or used for SIM registration fraud
- Your OTP (if shared) is stolen to access banking, JazzCash, Easypaisa, or WhatsApp accounts linked to your number
- Your payment (if made) is gone with no refund mechanism and no real data in return
- Your device may be exposed to malware if you download an app from these platforms
Stop test for fake sites: If any website, app, Telegram group, Facebook page, or WhatsApp contact asks you for an OTP, a CNIC photo, payment to see owner details, family names, banking information, or remote access to your phone while discussing a number check — stop immediately. This is not how the 76367 network check works. Real network checking does not require your personal information. It only needs the number you want to check.
📌 If you encounter a website claiming to offer private SIM records, the Pak SIM Data safe alternatives guide explains the safer options. See our Disclaimer for the full scope of what this site covers.
For tracker-related legal risks, read the Minahil SIM Tracker legal risks guide.
If You Came Here Looking for the Owner’s Name — Read This First
Some users arrive at the 76367 network check page hoping it can reveal who owns a mobile number. This is a common situation, especially after receiving threatening or repeated calls from an unknown number.
The honest answer: no official public tool in Pakistan returns the full registered name and CNIC of a stranger from their mobile number. This is intentional. PTA’s system was not designed to allow public stranger lookup, because doing so would create mass fraud and privacy risks.
What you can do without needing private owner data:
Step 1: Use 76367 network check to identify the current operator. This takes seconds.
Step 2: Report the number to that operator’s official support. Operators in Pakistan can flag and block numbers used for spam, harassment, and fraud through their internal systems.
Step 3: If the situation involves financial fraud, threats, or blackmail, file a formal complaint with the FIA Cybercrime Wing through their official channel. FIA has legal access to subscriber records and can investigate through proper legal process.
Step 4: If you are worried that someone may have registered a SIM using your own CNIC, check your own SIM records using the CNIC SIM check guide.
You do not need to find the caller’s private details yourself. The official complaint routes exist for exactly this.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is 76367 network check?
Answer: 76367 network check is an SMS service that shows the current network/operator of any Pakistani mobile number. Send N followed by a space and the 11-digit number to 76367. It returns the operator name only.
Does 76367 network check show the owner’s name?
Answer: No. 76367 network check shows the current operator only. It does not return the registered owner’s name, CNIC, address, call records, or any personal information of any kind.
Does 76367 network check show CNIC?
Answer: No. The 76367 network check has no connection to CNIC records. It only identifies the current mobile network/operator. No identity information is returned.
Does 76367 network check show live location?
Answer: No. 76367 network check is not a location service. It has no connection to any tracking system. It returns the current operator name only.
Is 76367 network check useful for ported numbers?
Answer: Yes. After MNP porting, the original prefix may not match the current network. The 76367 network check returns the live current operator — not the original one assigned with the prefix.
Why does a 0300 number show a different network?
Answer: The number was ported through MNP. The 0300 prefix belongs to Jazz originally, but the user may have moved to Zong, Telenor, or Ufone while keeping the same number. The 76367 network check shows the actual current operator.
What is the difference between 76367 and 667?
Answer: 76367 network check shows the current operator of any number. 667 shows the registered name on the SIM physically in your phone. They serve different purposes and cannot substitute for each other.
What is the difference between 76367 and 668?
Answer: 76367 network check identifies the current operator of any number. 668 shows all SIMs registered on your own CNIC by operator count. These answer completely different questions.
Is 76367 the same as cnic.sims.pk?
Answer: No. cnic.sims.pk is a free browser portal for checking SIMs on your own CNIC. 76367 network check identifies the current operator of any number. These are separate tools for separate needs.
Can 76367 network check work for Jazz, Zong, Telenor, Ufone, ONIC, and SCO?
Answer: Yes. 76367 network check identifies all active Pakistani mobile networks. For regional operators like SCO/SCOM, verify current availability with official PTA or operator support.
Are there charges for using 76367?
Answer: Standard SMS charges may apply. The exact rate can vary by operator and may change. Verify the current charge with your mobile operator before using the service.
What should I do after the 76367 network check result?
Answer: Note the operator shown. Contact that operator’s official support or file a formal complaint if needed. For CNIC-linked SIM concerns, use the CNIC SIM check guide separately.
Is it safe to use fake SIM owner websites?
Answer: No. Fake SIM owner websites are not connected to PTA systems. They fabricate results, harvest CNICs, steal OTPs, and may expose your device to malware. Use official methods only.
