Is area code 250 a scam?

Area code 250 is a legitimate British Columbia area code, but scammers can spoof any number — including 250. Here's how to tell a real 250 call from a scam and how to stop spam calls.

Area code 250 is associated with British Columbia. The area code on caller ID only tells you where a number is registered — not who is calling or whether they are trustworthy. Because caller ID can be spoofed, the safest move is to look up the exact number, not just the area code.

Why did I get a call from 250?

  • Neighbor spoofing — scammers fake a local British Columbia number so a familiar 250 shows on your screen and you're more likely to answer. The real caller can be anywhere.
  • Robocalls and telemarketing cycling through 250 numbers.
  • A real local caller — a Victoria-area business, service, or someone returning your call.
  • Debt collectors or surveys using a local-presence number.

How to tell a real 250 call from a scam

Judge the call by what it asks for, not the number. Warning signs: urgency or threats ("act now or you'll be arrested"); requests for gift cards, wire transfers, or cryptocurrency; callers claiming to be the IRS, SSA, your bank, or "tech support"; and anyone asking you to confirm a one-time code, password, or full SSN. A legitimate organization will let you hang up and call back on an official number.

How to stop spam calls from 250

Don't answer unknown 250 numbers — let them go to voicemail. Block persistent numbers, turn on your carrier's free spam filtering, register at donotcall.gov, and report unwanted calls to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov.

Area code 250 overview · Look up a phone number

Scam checks for related area codes

Sourced from the official NANPA (North American Numbering Plan Administrator) numbering database, current as of June 20, 2026. Refreshed monthly.