Knowledge Base
AVM Content
- FRITZ!Box 7690
- FRITZ!Box 7590 AX
- FRITZ!Box 7590
- FRITZ!Box 7583 VDSL
- FRITZ!Box 7583
- FRITZ!Box 7582
- FRITZ!Box 7581
- FRITZ!Box 7560
- FRITZ!Box 7530 AX
- FRITZ!Box 7530
- FRITZ!Box 7520
- FRITZ!Box 7510
- FRITZ!Box 7490
- FRITZ!Box 7430
- FRITZ!Box 7390
- FRITZ!Box 7360
- FRITZ!Box 6890 LTE
- FRITZ!Box 6850 5G
Two telephone numbers are displayed for one call in the call list
The caller signals both telephone numbers as his own number. In addition to the number actually assigned by the provider (Network Provided Number), the caller also transmits a telephone number he chose for himself (User Provided Number). The FRITZ!Box displays both numbers in the call list; the first number is the user provided number, and the number in parentheses is the network provided number. If you do not want the FRITZ!Box to accept these calls, set up a call block for the user provided number.
User provided numbers are used by companies with large PBXs (telephone systems) to direct calls to a specific number such as the reception desk or switchboard, for example. Call centers also like to use user provided numbers (for example toll-free telephone numbers) that are completely independent of the number assigned by the provider.
It is often possible to call both numbers back. The network provided number is the telephone number assigned to the telephone line by the telephony provider. It is the "real" telephone number and can always be called back. Unlike the "real" telephone number, though, the user provider number could have been manipulated by the caller since the telephony provider does not check whether the number is correct ("no screening").