NSW Community Safety Intelligence - February 2026

What NSW residents reported between 1-28 February 2026 - classifications, regional patterns, and numbers to watch.

Executive Summary

Based on community reports submitted to Reverseau between 1-28 February 2026. Classifications and patterns below come directly from what people reported.

Contributors submitted 2,766 reports across 2,162 distinct numbers in New South Wales - a significant increase of 25% compared to January 2026.

The leading classification was Scam at 27%.

Most reports came from Sydney, followed by Crookwell and Terrey Hills.

NSW's 27% scam rate ran 9 points above the national average of 18% this month.

Uncertain and Suspicious actually outpaced scam this month, making the overall classification mix broader than usual. The NSW data dashboard has up-to-date numbers and classifications.

Community Reports
2,766
vs January 2026 +25%
Unique Numbers Reported
2,162
Scam Rate
27%
National avg: 18% ↑ 9pp above

Classification Breakdown

How people in NSW classified the numbers they reported this month.

Scam27%
Uncertain24%
Suspicious17%
Spam16%
Nuisance13%
Legitimate4%
2.8k
reports

Scam led at 27% in February 2026, compared to 26% the month before.

Top Reporting Areas

Areas in New South Wales with the most reports this month.

Sydney generated 2064 reports - more than double Crookwell's 151. See the area pages above or the NSW data dashboard for full breakdowns.

Month-to-Month Comparison

Compared to January 2026, New South Wales saw a significant increase of 25% in report volume.

January 2026
2,213
February 2026
2,766
Change
+25%

Seasonal Context

February saw a 25% jump in reports compared to the prior month. Spikes this size usually trace back to one or two high-volume campaigns entering the dataset.

Notable Changes

Scam accounted for 27% of classified reports in February.

Sydney (2064 reports) and Crookwell (151) remained the busiest areas despite the overall increase.

Trends & Observations

Several numbers collected reports in a short time frame and were quickly classified as scam by contributors.

Numbers Picking Up Reports Quickly

10 numbers in NSW picked up multiple reports in a short period this month, which typically indicates active call campaigns.

Flagged numbers averaged 6 reports each, meaning multiple people encountered them independently.

Reports on these numbers came from multiple areas across NSW, which points to automated dialling rather than calls targeting a single region.

Mixed Classifications

Some numbers got both scam and non-scam reports during February 2026. This can happen when a legitimate number is being spoofed, when a business number starts getting used for something else, or when people simply aren't sure what the call was about. These are worth keeping an eye on.

Previous Month's Flagged Numbers

Numbers that were trending in January 2026 - did they continue or go quiet?

NumberJanuary 2026February 2026Status
(02) 8103 2294 10 reports 2 reports Active
(02) 7245 9665 9 reports 0 reports Inactive
(02) 8103 2278 9 reports 5 reports Active
(02) 8103 2295 7 reports 1 reports Active
(02) 9129 5618 7 reports 7 reports Active

Safety Tips

  • Don't call back unknown 02 numbers without checking them first.
  • The ATO, Centrelink, and Medicare won't threaten you over the phone. If someone claims to be from a government agency, hang up and call the official number yourself.
  • Don't tap payment or delivery links in texts from numbers you don't recognise.
  • Got a suspicious call? Report it - every report helps other people in New South Wales.
  • Look up numbers on Reverseau before calling back.

How We Compiled This

Built from community reports submitted to Reverseau between 1-28 February 2026. All data is aggregated and anonymised.

  • Source: First-hand reports from the community.
  • Scope: Numbers allocated to New South Wales (NSW).
  • Period: 1-28 February 2026.
  • Classifications: Chosen by the person who reported the number.
  • Limitations: This is what people reported, not verified telecom records. Volume depends on how many people use the platform.

More detail on our methodology page. Full dataset on the NSW data dashboard.