Executive Summary
This report analyses community-submitted telecommunications safety data across Northern Territory between 1–30 April 2025. All classifications, trend observations, and regional patterns are derived from first-hand community intelligence aggregated through the Reverseau platform.
Northern Territory recorded 43 community reports across 27 unique phone numbers during the reporting period. Compared to March 2025, reporting volume showed a significant increase of 23%, while 27 numbers remained under active community monitoring throughout the month.
Scam remains the most frequently assigned community classification at 51% of categorised reports, with a scam classification ratio of 51% across all submissions. Scam maintained its position as the dominant classification in both periods, suggesting sustained targeting patterns rather than campaign rotation.
Geographically, reporting activity was concentrated in Noonamah, followed by Darwin and Carpentaria. Reporting activity was broadly distributed across Noonamah and Darwin, with no single locality dominating the reporting landscape.
April coincides with peak tax scam season as the end of the Australian financial year approaches. ATO impersonation campaigns historically surge during this month.
With scam classifications representing 51% of reports, the data indicates active but not overwhelming targeting levels within Northern Territory. Residents are encouraged to report suspicious telecommunications activity and consult the NT data dashboard for real-time classification and trend data.
Why This Matters
Sustained scam classification dominance at 51% across consecutive reporting periods suggests structural targeting patterns rather than isolated campaign surges. When a single classification category maintains this level of prevalence, it indicates persistent, organised activity that is unlikely to self-correct without sustained community awareness. Continued monitoring across Northern Territory’s metropolitan and regional areas remains critical to early detection of coordinated telecommunications fraud and to building the community intelligence layer that enables faster classification convergence on emerging threats.
Scam Category Breakdown
Community classification distribution across NT for the period 1–30 April 2025. Classifications are assigned by reporting users based on their direct experience with each number.
Scam accounted for 51% of categorised reports during April 2025. In March 2025, Scam held the top position with 63% of classifications. Scam maintained its position as the dominant classification in both periods, suggesting sustained targeting patterns rather than campaign rotation.
Most Affected Areas in Northern Territory
Localities with the highest concentration of community reports during 1–30 April 2025. Each locality links to its dedicated intelligence page with full classification breakdowns and number listings.
Reporting activity was broadly distributed across Noonamah and Darwin, with no single locality dominating the reporting landscape. For detailed locality-level analysis, visit the individual area pages linked above or explore the NT data dashboard.
Month-to-Month Comparison
Compared to March 2025, Northern Territory experienced a significant increase of 23% in community reporting volume. Overall activity has increased, with limited but notable monitoring coverage across the state.
Seasonal Context
April coincides with peak tax scam season as the end of the Australian financial year approaches. ATO impersonation campaigns historically surge during this month. The observed increase of 23% aligns with typical post-seasonal campaign escalation, where scam operators increase targeting activity in response to changing consumer behaviour patterns.
Classification Movement
Scam classifications accounted for 51% of categorised reports in April, with scam-specific reports representing 51% of all submissions. These shifts in community classification patterns may reflect evolving campaign tactics, changes in the types of numbers being reported, or natural variation in reporting behaviour between periods. Monitoring classification movement over consecutive months provides a more reliable indicator of genuine trend shifts than any single-month comparison.
Regional Variation
Despite the overall increase in reporting volume, Noonamah remained the primary reporting hub. Elevated reporting in Noonamah may reflect both population density effects and localised campaign activity rather than a uniform state-wide increase.
Service Type Distribution
Local Service numbers account for 100% of reported activity, reflecting the broader national pattern where mobile-originated calls dominate community safety reports. Residents should exercise particular caution with unsolicited calls from unfamiliar local service numbers.
Emerging Trends & Observations
Several numbers exhibited accelerated reporting velocity within compressed time windows, followed by classification convergence toward scam designation.
Rapid Accumulation Signals
3 numbers within NT accumulated multiple community reports within a compressed time window during 1–30 April 2025. This velocity pattern is consistent with active call campaigns or coordinated targeting activity. Numbers exhibiting rapid report accumulation frequently transition from initial “Unknown” or “Suspicious” classifications to confirmed “Scam” designation within days.
Flagged numbers averaged 5 reports each, consistent with early-stage campaign detection where community awareness is still building.
Several flagged numbers exhibited cross-locality reporting dispersion, with community submissions originating from multiple areas within NT. This pattern suggests broadcast-style outbound activity rather than localised outreach, consistent with automated dialling campaigns that target numbers across geographic boundaries.
Divergent Classification Signals
Several numbers display mixed community classifications — receiving both scam and non-scam reports during April 2025. This divergence may indicate numbers transitioning between legitimate and illegitimate use, caller ID spoofing of legitimate business numbers, or community uncertainty about the nature of calls received. Numbers with divergent classifications warrant continued monitoring as community consensus develops.
Community Safety Guidance
- Do not return missed calls from unknown 08 numbers without verification.
- Verify any government agency claims through official websites or published contact numbers — the ATO, Centrelink, and Medicare will never threaten immediate action via phone.
- Avoid clicking payment or delivery links received via SMS from unrecognised senders.
- Report suspicious telecommunications activity to help build community safety intelligence for Northern Territory.
- Check numbers on Reverseau before returning calls from unknown sources.
Data Methodology
This report is compiled from community-submitted telecommunications safety reports for the period 1–30 April 2025. All data is aggregated and anonymised before publication.
- Source: First-hand community reports submitted via Reverseau.
- Scope: Numbers with a registered allocation within Northern Territory (NT).
- Period: 1–30 April 2025 (calendar month).
- Classifications: Assigned by reporting users based on their direct experience.
- Limitations: Data reflects community perception, not verified telecommunications records. Reporting volumes are influenced by platform adoption and user engagement patterns.
For detailed methodology, see our methodology page. For the full analytical dataset, visit the NT data dashboard.