What you can (and cannot) check
- You can check: Network/operator (Jazz, Zong, Ufone, Telenor), number status (active/inactive), count of SIMs on your CNIC, and SIM registration status.
- You cannot publicly access: Full CNIC of someone else, home address, or private identity data without due legal process.
Heads-up: Any “free database” promising full CNIC + address detail for random numbers is likely illegal, outdated, or a phishing attempt. Use official flows only.
Step-by-step: Verify SIM information (PTA-approved)
1) Check SIMs registered on your CNIC
- Send CNIC (without dashes) via SMS to 668.
- You’ll receive a list of active SIMs per operator under your CNIC.
2) Check your number’s network & status
- Dial your operator’s self-service code (e.g., *99# or official app). Most networks show owner name initials and package details to the owner.
- Alternatively, call the official helpline (Jazz 111, Zong 310, Ufone 333, Telenor 345) from the same SIM for verification.
3) Report misuse or identity theft
- File a complaint on the official citizen portal or at your nearest police station/cybercrime wing with proof (screenshots, call logs).
- Operators can block/trace with a lawful request. Keep your CNIC and SIM ownership documents ready.
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Open SMM PanelPak SIM Data vs. “Live Tracker” — the reality
Searches like “pak sim data”, “sim info”, or “live tracker sim data” are popular, but public live tracking of a random number’s exact location is not made available to the general public. Real-time location data is restricted to law-enforcement workflows. Any website promising otherwise is either inaccurate or risky.
Quick comparison
| Action | Is It Legal? | How to Do It |
|---|---|---|
| Check SIMs on your CNIC | Yes | SMS your CNIC to 668 |
| See owner name of a stranger | No (publicly) | Only via LEA/official request for legal cases |
| Trace live location of any number | No (publicly) | LEA-only with lawful authorization |
| Confirm your own SIM ownership | Yes | Operator app/helpline from the same number |
Best practices to protect your identity
- Never share full CNIC or one-time codes (OTP) in DMs.
- Use official operator apps and verified short-codes only.
- Regularly check the number of SIMs on your CNIC (668).
- Close unused SIMs to prevent abuse.