NoNumber
Talk first. Share less.
Questions? Start here.
NoNumber helps you talk without handing over your personal number. Create a temporary call link, let someone request a live voice conversation, and stay in control of what happens next.
Getting Started
NoNumber lets you talk or text without giving someone your personal phone number.
You create a temporary call link, share it, and the other person can use that link from their web browser. You stay in control of whether the conversation happens.
1. You create a temporary call link in the app.
2. You share the link or QR code.
3. The other person opens it on the web.
4. They request a conversation.
5. You choose whether to accept, decline, defer, or delete the request.
6. If you accept, both of you join the same NoNumber session without exposing your personal number.
7. During an active session, you can talk live and send messages through the same link.
No.
The creator uses the NoNumber app to generate and manage call links. The guest can open the link from the web and request a call without going through the full app flow first.
Your link can move through different states depending on what happens next.
For example, it may be active, requested, accepted, in-call, ended, expired, revoked, or used.
That helps keep each conversation temporary and controlled.
Privacy & Control
No.
Using your NoNumber link does not give someone your personal phone number. They use the link to connect with you instead.
No.
A NoNumber link lets someone request a conversation. It does not give them direct access to your phone number, and it does not mean they can call you whenever they want.
You decide whether to accept the request.
Yes.
You stay in control. You can accept, decline, defer, delete, or simply not respond to a request.
If you do not respond in time, the request can time out.
Yes.
You can remove access by deleting or revoking a call link. Once a link is no longer active, it cannot be used to start a new call request.
Features
NoNumber currently supports temporary call links, guest links, QR codes, web-based guest access, request-and-approval before a conversation begins, live audio calls, in-session messaging, in-call microphone controls, call ending, cancellation, rejoin behavior, scheduled call windows, active and past call-link states, expiration, revocation, and used-link behavior.
Yes. A NoNumber link is not limited to voice.
Once a session is active, both people can send messages through the same link. Those messages are temporary and disappear when the call ends.
No.
A NoNumber link can support live voice and temporary messaging in the same session. It is still built around private, controlled conversations rather than permanent contact sharing.
Yes, if your NoNumber access includes scheduled call windows.
A scheduled link can be set to open at a specific start time and close at a specific end time. Before it opens, the guest sees that the link is not available yet. After the window closes, the link is no longer available.
Yes, if your NoNumber access includes email sending.
You can send the same NoNumber link to an email address instead of only copying it manually. The recipient gets the same link they would use for voice and messaging.
No.
Live calls require an internet connection.
No.
NoNumber supports messaging inside the same temporary link, but it is still focused on private, time-bound conversations rather than becoming your entire messaging life.
No.
NoNumber is not a full phone service and does not replace your regular phone plan. It is designed for temporary, privacy-first conversations.
NoNumber is not a replacement for your phone plan, a general messaging platform, a permanent contact-sharing tool, a broad consumer communications suite, or a way to give strangers unlimited access to you.
It is built for one clear job: temporary conversations without exposing your real number.
Use Cases
NoNumber is for anyone who wants to talk without immediately handing over permanent access to their phone.
It is especially useful for dating, marketplace meetups, business outreach, community organizing, local services, events, and any situation where you want a real conversation with better boundaries.
No.
Dating is one strong use case, but NoNumber is broader than that. It is useful anywhere a live conversation helps, but sharing your personal number feels like too much too soon.
Yes.
NoNumber can be useful for business outreach, customer conversations, sales calls, service providers, creators, and anyone who wants to offer a way to talk without publishing a personal number.