Why caller ID is not proof anymore
A familiar name or local number can make a call feel safe. For high-stakes requests, caller ID is only a clue. It is not proof.
What can go wrong
Scammers can make calls and messages appear to come from a bank, company, government agency, local number, or known contact. This is why families need a call-back rule before a caller asks for money, codes, passwords, account access, or secrecy.
The call-back rule
When a surprise contact creates urgency, end that contact and start a new one using information you already trust.
- Do not press redial.
- Do not call the number in the suspicious message.
- Do not click the link in the message.
- Use the number on the card, statement, saved contact, or official website typed manually.
Script to use
"I do not verify through incoming calls. I am hanging up and calling the official number I already have."
Where to write trusted numbers
Keep a printed trusted-number sheet near the phone or in the family binder. Include the bank, credit cards, phone provider, local police non-emergency line, and two family contacts.
The workbook gives your family a printable trusted-number sheet, call-back flow, and phone-side script so nobody has to improvise under pressure.
Buy the ebook