Executive Summary
This report analyses community-submitted telecommunications safety data across Northern Territory between 1–31 December 2025. All classifications, trend observations, and regional patterns are derived from first-hand community intelligence aggregated through the Reverseau platform.
Northern Territory recorded 7 community reports across 7 unique phone numbers during the reporting period. Compared to November 2025, reporting volume showed a notable decrease of 71%, while 7 numbers remained under active community monitoring throughout the month.
Scam remains the most frequently assigned community classification at 43% of categorised reports, with a scam classification ratio of 43% across all submissions. A classification shift was observed: Scam displaced Suspicious as the dominant category, which may indicate a transition in active campaign strategies or a change in community reporting behaviour.
Geographically, reporting activity was concentrated in Darwin, followed by Alice Springs. Darwin recorded more than double the reporting volume of the next most active locality (Alice Springs), indicating concentrated campaign activity or higher community engagement within this area.
December is dominated by holiday-themed scam campaigns, delivery fraud, and charitable donation scams. Reporting volumes may fluctuate as community engagement shifts during the holiday period.
With scam classifications representing 43% 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
The proportion of scam-classified reports at 43% indicates active but evolving targeting patterns across Northern Territory. Understanding these patterns at a community level enables faster identification of emerging campaign types and reduces the window between first contact and community-wide awareness. Sustained reporting activity across multiple localities strengthens the collective intelligence foundation, allowing classification convergence to accelerate as more residents contribute first-hand safety data to the NT reporting ecosystem.
Scam Category Breakdown
Community classification distribution across NT for the period 1–31 December 2025. Classifications are assigned by reporting users based on their direct experience with each number.
Scam accounted for 43% of categorised reports during December 2025. In November 2025, Suspicious held the top position with 42% of classifications. A classification shift was observed: Scam displaced Suspicious as the dominant category, which may indicate a transition in active campaign strategies or a change in community reporting behaviour.
Most Affected Areas in Northern Territory
Localities with the highest concentration of community reports during 1–31 December 2025. Each locality links to its dedicated intelligence page with full classification breakdowns and number listings.
Darwin recorded more than double the reporting volume of the next most active locality (Alice Springs), indicating concentrated campaign activity or higher community engagement within this area. For detailed locality-level analysis, visit the individual area pages linked above or explore the NT data dashboard.
Month-to-Month Comparison
Compared to November 2025, Northern Territory experienced a notable decrease of 71% in community reporting volume. Overall activity has decreased, with limited but notable monitoring coverage across the state.
Seasonal Context
December is dominated by holiday-themed scam campaigns, delivery fraud, and charitable donation scams. Reporting volumes may fluctuate as community engagement shifts during the holiday period. The observed decrease of 71% may reflect seasonal reporting variation, reduced campaign activity, or shifts in community engagement patterns during this period.
Classification Movement
Scam classifications accounted for 43% of categorised reports in December, with scam-specific reports representing 43% 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
Darwin maintained its position as the most active reporting locality even as overall volumes declined. This persistence suggests that reporting behaviour in metropolitan areas is more resilient to volume fluctuations than regional submissions.
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
Signal patterns remained within expected baseline parameters for the reporting period.
No significant signal escalations were detected during 1–31 December 2025 for Northern Territory. Community reporting patterns remained within expected baseline parameters. This does not necessarily indicate reduced scam activity — it may reflect stable campaign patterns or consistent community reporting behaviour across the period.
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 1–31 December 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: 1–31 December 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.