BusinessO2 sent me a £150 phone bill for a...

O2 sent me a £150 phone bill for a call – after just one ring

-

Recently I discovered that O2 has billed me £150 for a mobile phone call it says I made to Armenia at 5am on 25 June.

As I was safely tucked up in bed at home, with my phone nearby, there was no way I could have made that call.

Trying to get this refunded has been impossible. I first tried the O2 shop in Havant, but it said it could not help. When I called the main contact centre, which was obviously not in the UK, I could not get it to believe that I did not make the call.

By looking at my phone records, O2 could easily see that I use my phone rarely, do not travel abroad, and have no contacts outside the UK.

I am in my 70s and retired, and don’t feel O2 has treated me fairly.

DB, Hants

I asked O2 about your case, and after carrying out a full investigation, it has decided that you must have fallen victim to a “Wangiri scam”.

Wangiri is a Japanese word that means “one ring and cut”. Fraudsters attempting this scam will ring from a premium rate or international number and quickly hang up in the hope that a victim will call them back.

If someone does, the fraudsters will try to keep them on the line for as long as possible to run up expensive call charges.

In January we reported on the case of a five-hour call to Tunisia, also involving O2, that the company put down to the same scam.

I am not sure I am convinced by that explanation in this case, as you say you were tucked up in bed at the time. I guess that it’s possible that you pocket dialled this number by accident and the call time is wrong, but this seems unlikely. However, O2 is adamant that a call charge can’t be applied to a customer’s account without it happening.

Fortunately, you don’t need to concern yourself as, after our intervention, it has refunded you the £150 charge as a gesture of goodwill. Given the problems with sim card swap fraud at O2 I’d be keeping a very close eye on my account.

I think you have already put a bar on international and premium rate numbers, which I would have recommended.

I would also suggest you apply a spend cap to your account of, say, £10. This means your bill can only go £10 over your contracted amount.

O2 says customers can report suspicious calls from abroad by emailing [email protected] to allow it to bar the number on its network.

Has anyone else experienced this? Email the usual address.

We welcome letters but cannot answer individually. Email us at [email protected] or write to Consumer Champions, Money, the Guardian, 90 York Way, London N1 9GU. Please include a daytime phone number. Submission and publication of all letters is subject to our terms and conditions.

Latest news

Salvador Dali Prints Found

A treasure trove of prints signed by Spanish surrealist Salvador Dali which had been "tucked away and forgotten" for...

Investors Lay Siege To Boardroom Of London-Listed Private Rental Group

A group of shareholders in PRS REIT, a London-listed investment trust, are laying siege to its boardroom in a...

Anglesey: Three People Killed After Road Crash Near Pier In North Wales Seaside Town

Three people have been killed in a road collision in Anglesey, police have confirmed.North Wales Police say it responded...

Lego Drive For Green Bricks Is Raising Costs

Lego says a drive to remove fossil fuels from its bricks is making further progress but the alternatives, while...

Must read

More

    Watchdog opens investigation into anti-immigrant posts on Facebook

    Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta must answer “serious questions” about its...

    Meta rides AI boom to stellar quarterly earnings, but slightly less than expected

    Meta’s blowout year continues after the company reported another...

    You might also likeRELATED
    Recommended to you