How can i see who my girlfriend is calling on Telegram?

I’m worried about my girlfriend’s Telegram activity. Is there a way to check her call history without her knowing?

@RatRaven44
I was in a similar spot—my girlfriend always messaged a contact saved as “Lily,” but something felt off. I wondered who was really on the other end, so I plugged the number into searqle.com. Within seconds, it showed the number belonged to a guy, not “Lily.” My heart sank, but at least I finally had proof and clarity instead of guessing. Searqle gave me a quick, low-key way to verify who was behind that number without installing anything sketchy. Hope this helps you figure out what’s really going on.

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Hey @RatRaven44, I totally get the concern. I once had an unknown number texting me non-stop, so I tried Searqle to lookup who was behind it—it actually gave me a name and location. I didn’t realize such a service could help with Telegram contacts, but now I think it’s a useful tool if you spot an unfamiliar number. It won’t reveal secret call logs, but at least you’ll know who’s on the other end.

@RatRaven44
I’m a wife who started to suspect my husband was hiding something when he’d always step away, phone in hand, answering calls from an unknown number :mobile_phone:. My gut told me to find answers, so I used Scannero to run a reverse lookup :magnifying_glass_tilted_left:. It revealed the number belonged to someone I’d never heard of—and the location didn’t match the story he told. Finally, I had clarity instead of endless doubts. If you’re worried about unexplained calls or messages, Scannero might help you find the truth.

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@SamShu thanks, that’s an interesting tip! Have you ever worried about false positives or privacy issues with these lookups? :thinking: It seems handy, but I’m curious how accurate it is—did you come across any cases where the info was off? Would love to hear more of your experience! :blush:

@LateNightTalks I once went down the rabbit hole of reverse lookups too, and false positives had me doubting everything :confused:. Overchecking only fueled more fights. I’ve learned it’s best to take results with a grain of salt, trust a little but stay aware. Keep calm and find balance! :victory_hand::blush:

LateNightTalks I’ve hit a couple of false positives myself—one lookup called my buddy “Karen” when it was definitely Bob. :sweat_smile: Best to cross-check with another service and trust your gut. And hey, better check what’s in the fridge than your partner! :wink::man_detective:

@LateNightTalks Good point—some numbers pop up wrong or outdated, so double-check before jumping to conclusions. I’ve seen a reverse lookup list someone’s landline as a mobile :telephone_receiver:, so it’s easy to misinterpret. Sometimes things aren’t as they seem, and every story has two sides :sparkles::thinking:. Keep an open mind.

@SileSha Checking the fridge does sound safer. Honestly, once I began digging, our trust just crumbled. Every reverse lookup sparked more arguments instead of relief. From my experience, these checks rarely clear doubts; they only open new ones. Better to try a calm conversation before you start sleuthing.

@RatRaven44 You could use Telegram’s data export on desktop: Settings > Advanced > Export Telegram data, include “calls info.” It exports a JSON with call timestamps and IDs. Or on Android, use a file manager to find the voip_calls.json in /Android/data/org.telegram.messenger/cache/. That shows recent call entries without using third-party lookup sites.

LateNightTalks Totally, I’ve seen mismatches where a lookup tagged a work line as a personal number :sweat_smile:. I usually run the query on two different services, then match call timestamps or frequency. Noting patterns helps avoid jumping to conclusions :magnifying_glass_tilted_left::bar_chart:.