What is 'Spam Likely'?
'Spam Likely' is a carrier-added label that appears on a recipient's phone when call analytics engines decide an incoming call is probably unwanted. Getting one attached to your business number can tank your answer rates overnight.
Written By Catherine Weir
Last updated About 2 hours ago
"Spam Likely" is a carrier-added label that appears on the recipient's phone when call analytics engines decide an incoming call is probably unwanted. You've seen it — the words "Spam Likely" or "Potential Spam" or "Suspected Spam" in red on your iPhone or Android screen instead of the caller's name.
The label is added by mobile carriers (Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile) based on signals from third-party analytics engines (TNS, Hiya, First Orion, Transaction Network Services, and others) that score every call in real time. If your business number gets labeled "Spam Likely," your answer rates can drop dramatically within hours.
What triggers a "Spam Likely" label
Carrier analytics engines consider dozens of signals. The most important:
Call volume — high outbound volume in a short period, especially from a newly active number, is a strong spam signal
Short call durations — lots of calls that last seconds suggest telemarketing or robocalls
Consumer complaints — people can report numbers directly through their phone, and a small number of reports can trigger a label
Calling patterns — calling across wide geographies, at odd hours, or in bursts
Number reputation history — if your number was previously owned by a spammer, you may inherit their label
STIR/SHAKEN attestation — C-attested or unsigned calls get flagged more readily
Unregistered numbers — numbers without carrier registration are guilty until proven innocent
Why "Spam Likely" is so damaging
Mobile users don't answer labeled calls — answer rates often drop 60–90%
The label follows you across carriers; once tagged, it's hard to clean up
Legitimate callbacks, reminders, and outbound sales campaigns all get hit together
Even text messages from a flagged number can be deprioritized
How to avoid getting labeled
Register your numbers — with carriers and with the major analytics engines. This is the single most important step.
Configure CNAM — a clear, recognizable business name helps signal legitimacy
Use STIR/SHAKEN A attestation — ensures your calls are cryptographically verified as authorized
Warm up new numbers gradually — don't make 1,000 calls on day one from a brand-new number
Match call duration to purpose — a "lead qualification" call that lasts 10 seconds on average will get flagged; structure calls to have real conversations
Monitor your reputation — check registered analytics engines weekly for drift
Rotate numbers only when necessary — "churn and burn" number rotation is a telltale spam pattern
How to clean up a flagged number
Contact the analytics engines directly and submit a cleanup request; most have a formal dispute process for registered business numbers
Pause the calling campaign that triggered the label — if you keep calling, reputation keeps dropping
Update CNAM and carrier registration if anything is incorrect
Wait — reputation recovers slowly when the bad signals stop
Related concepts
See it in action
365agents monitors every outbound number on your Receptionist Agent against the major analytics engines continuously. When we detect a label forming, we alert you, help identify the cause, and support the cleanup dispute process — before your answer rates drop.