Zong SIM Owner Details 2026 — Here Is How You Check Them in Seconds
So you want to check who owns a Zong number, or you simply want to confirm how many Zong SIMs sit on your CNIC. Good news — you do not need any paid tool, sketchy website, or random app. I will walk you through every official method that actually works in 2026, just like I would explain it to a friend over chai.
The Quick Answer (For People in a Hurry)
Look, if you only have thirty seconds, here is what you need to know. Send the word MNP as an SMS to 667 from the Zong SIM you want to check. You will get the registered owner name back in under ten seconds. That is it.
However, if you want to see all the Zong SIMs on your CNIC, send your 13-digit CNIC (no dashes) to 668 instead. PTA replies with the full list across every network.
Want the full picture, including app methods and what to do if something looks wrong? Keep reading. I promise it is worth your five minutes.
What Are Zong SIM Owner Details, Really?
Here is the simple version. Every time someone activates a Zong SIM in Pakistan, the staff at the franchise scans their thumb on the NADRA biometric machine. The machine then locks that SIM to one specific CNIC for life — or until you transfer it through proper channels.
Zong belongs to China Mobile Pakistan (CMPak), and as of February 2026, it serves around 45 million people across the country. With roughly 26.55% market share, Zong is Pakistan’s second-biggest network, right behind Jazz. You can read more about how Zong stacks up against the rest in our Pakistani Mobile Networks 2026 pillar guide.
So when we talk about “Zong SIM owner details,” we are really talking about the official record Zong submits to the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority. That record contains six things: the registered name, the CNIC number, the activation date, the SIM type, the biometric verification status, and whether the SIM is currently active.
Why You Should Actually Care
Honestly, most people only check their SIM details after something goes wrong. By then, the damage is already done. So let me explain why you should check today, not tomorrow.
Firstly, criminals in Pakistan often steal CNIC photos to register SIMs in other people’s names. They then use those SIMs for scams, harassment, or worse. And here is the scary part — under Pakistani law, you are responsible for every SIM registered on your CNIC, even the ones you never bought.
Secondly, your Zong SIM probably connects to apps you actually care about. Think mobile banking, JazzCash transfers, Easypaisa, Facebook recovery, even your bank’s OTP system. If a fraudster swaps your SIM, they can drain your accounts in minutes.
Thirdly, PTA enforces a strict cap of 5 voice SIMs and 3 data-only SIMs per CNIC. If unauthorized Zong numbers push you over the limit, your real SIMs can get blocked without warning. Therefore, monthly checks are not optional anymore. They are basic digital hygiene.
Method 1: Send MNP to 667 (My Personal Favourite)
How to do it
Pop the Zong SIM into any phone. Open Messages. Type MNP in capital letters. Send it to 667. Within ten seconds, you receive an SMS back with the registered owner’s name, a masked CNIC, and the current operator name.
This is the method I recommend ninety percent of the time. Why? Because it works on basic feature phones too — no smartphone, no internet, no app downloads needed. Furthermore, it costs you about one rupee plus tax. That is cheaper than half a samosa.
The 667 service is officially run by PTA to confirm Mobile Number Portability status. However, it also returns owner data for whatever Zong SIM is sitting in your phone right now. So it is perfect when you buy a used Zong number from someone and want to confirm the seller is the real owner before paying.
Method 2: Send Your CNIC to 668 (The CNIC-Wide Audit)
How to do it
Type your CNIC without dashes. For example, if your CNIC is 35201-1234567-1, just type 3520112345671. Send it to 668. PTA replies with a clean breakdown showing how many SIMs you have on Jazz, Zong, Telenor, Ufone, and SCOM.
Now this one is different. Instead of checking just one Zong SIM, the 668 service checks every SIM registered to your CNIC across all Pakistani networks. Therefore, if someone fraudulently registered a Zong number in your name, this is where you spot it.
Just remember one limitation. The 668 service tells you how many Zong SIMs sit on your CNIC, but it does not show the actual numbers. To see those, you need to visit a Zong Customer Service Centre. We will get to that in Method 7.
Method 3: Send “V” to 7911 (For Biometric Status)
How to do it
Open Messages on the phone with your Zong SIM. Type just the letter V. Send it to 7911. You will quickly receive a confirmation showing whether your Zong SIM has completed biometric verification through NADRA.
So why does this matter? Well, PTA has been running a biometric re-verification campaign across 2024–2026. Any Zong SIM that fails re-verification enters a 120-day countdown that ends in permanent deactivation. Therefore, sending V to 7911 tells you whether your SIM is safe or whether you need to walk into a CSC for a fresh thumb impression.
Honestly, this is one of those checks that takes five seconds but saves you from waking up to a dead SIM one morning. Worth doing every few months.
Method 4: My Zong App (For the Daily Self-Audit)
How to do it
Grab the My Zong app from Google Play or the Apple App Store. Log in using your Zong number and the one-time password they text you. Tap My Account, and the dashboard shows your registered name, masked CNIC, and biometric status right there.
Honestly, the My Zong app is what I recommend if you want one place to manage everything. Beyond owner details, it tracks your remaining minutes, MBs, daily data quota, package expiry, and even billing. Plus, you can raise an SIM ownership dispute directly from the app without leaving home.
However, there is one catch. The app only shows details for the Zong SIM you logged in with. So if you have multiple Zong numbers, you have to log in separately to each one. Or just use 668 to see them all at once.
Method 5: Call Zong Helpline 310 (When You Need a Human)
How to do it
Dial 310 from your Zong SIM — completely free. Listen through the IVR menu, then press the option for “Account Information” or wait for an agent. Once they verify your identity through CNIC and date of birth, they will read out your registered name, activation date, and SIM status.
Now, calling helpline 310 makes sense in two situations. Firstly, when SMS shortcodes are not returning anything for some reason. Secondly, when you suspect something fishy — like a recent re-verification request you did not make — and want a human to dig into the issue.
Just one heads-up. Wait times spike between 6 PM and 9 PM on weekdays. So call between 10 AM and 1 PM if you want the fastest pickup.
Method 6: PTA Portal at cnic.sims.pk (For Printable Proof)
How to do it
Open cnic.sims.pk on any browser. Enter your 13-digit CNIC. Complete the small CAPTCHA. Hit Submit. The portal shows you exactly how many SIMs sit on your CNIC, broken down by operator — including all your Zong SIMs.
Here is why this method matters. The PTA portal generates a clean, timestamped, printable result. Therefore, if you ever need to file an unauthorized SIM complaint with the FIA, fight a bank dispute, or prove identity theft in court, this printout is your evidence.
The portal is jointly run by PTA and NADRA, so the data is identical to what you get from 668. Just in a more “official document” format.
Method 7: Visit a Zong CSC (For the Full Number List)
Sometimes 668 tells you “Zong: 3 SIMs” but you only own two Zong numbers. So which is the third one? You cannot get those actual numbers through SMS or USSD — Pakistani privacy law blocks that. Instead, you have to walk into a Zong Customer Service Centre with your original CNIC in hand.
- Carry your original CNIC. Photocopies and expired CNICs are rejected, every single time.
- Complete the biometric thumb scan. The MBVS device confirms you are physically present and actually the CNIC holder.
- Request the Zong SIM ownership list. Ask specifically for “all Zong numbers registered under my CNIC.” The agent prints a complete list with activation dates and current status.
- Identify any unfamiliar number. Cross-check the printed list against the Zong SIMs you actually use.
- File a disowning request on the spot. If you spot an unauthorized number, sign the Zong disowning form right then. The SIM gets blocked within 24 to 48 hours.
You can find your nearest Zong CSC through the official Zong contact and franchise locator.
Method 8: Use the Live Tracker Online Tool
Now, sometimes you just got a missed call from a strange 0310-something number and you want to know who called. You do not have the SIM in your hand. You cannot call 667. So what do you do?
This is exactly why we built the Live Tracker tool. Just visit the homepage on your phone or laptop, type the Zong number into the search bar, and click Track Now. The tool returns the publicly available registration data — owner name and network operator — in seconds.
- Open Live Tracker. Go to the Live Tracker homepage on any device.
- Enter the Zong number. Type the full 11-digit number, like 0310-1234567.
- Click Track Now. The tool checks the database and returns the result.
- Review what comes back. You see the owner name, operator, and current SIM status.
For the full walkthrough across every Pakistani network, check our broader guide on SIM Owner Details Pakistan.
Which Method Should You Pick?
Honestly, every method serves a different purpose. So let me lay them out side by side so you can pick the right one for your situation.
| Method | What You Get | Speed | Cost | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MNP to 667 | Owner name + masked CNIC of one Zong SIM | 10 sec | ~Rs. 1 | Buying a used Zong SIM |
| CNIC to 668 | Total Zong SIM count + all networks | 11 sec | ~Rs. 1 | Monthly self-audit |
| V to 7911 | Zong biometric verification status | 5 sec | ~Rs. 1 | Avoiding sudden SIM blocks |
| My Zong App | Full self details + biometric + balance | 30 sec | Free + data | Daily self-management |
| Helpline 310 | Voice verification with agent | 2–10 min | Free | Tricky disputes |
| cnic.sims.pk | Printable timestamped SIM list | 20 sec | Free | Legal evidence for FIR |
| Zong CSC | Actual Zong numbers under your CNIC | 15–30 min | Free | Disowning unauthorized SIMs |
| Live Tracker | Owner name + operator of any number | 5 sec | Free | Identifying unknown callers |
Zong Number Prefixes (0310–0318)
Quick fact — Zong holds nine four-digit prefixes, all starting with the 031 series. So if you see a Pakistani number that begins with 0310, 0311, 0312, 0313, 0314, 0315, 0316, 0317, or 0318, it was originally issued by Zong.
| Prefix | Issuer | Common Use |
|---|---|---|
| 0310 | Zong (CMPak) | Original Zong allocation, vanity numbers. |
| 0311 | Zong (CMPak) | Standard prepaid range. |
| 0312 | Zong (CMPak) | Widely circulated prepaid. |
| 0313 | Zong (CMPak) | Common activation pool. |
| 0314 | Zong (CMPak) | Standard prepaid range. |
| 0315 | Zong (CMPak) | Common allocation. |
| 0316 | Zong (CMPak) | Standard activation. |
| 0317 | Zong (CMPak) | Newer activations. |
| 0318 | Zong (CMPak) | Most recent allocations. |
Is This Even Legal?
Short answer? Yes — for your own SIMs. Pakistani law fully allows you to check Zong SIM ownership for any SIM tied to your CNIC or physically held in your phone. PTA itself runs the 667 and 668 services for exactly this reason.
However, the law is strict on one boundary. You cannot look up another person’s Zong number and pull up their name without lawful authority. The Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act 2016 specifically prohibits unauthorized access to someone else’s SIM registration data. Therefore, please avoid:
- Random websites promising “Pak SIM database” or “live owner lookup” for any number — most are illegal scrapers.
- Apps that ask for someone else’s CNIC to “find their SIMs.”
- WhatsApp groups offering paid SIM data — the FIA actively prosecutes both sellers and buyers.
PTA has blocked over 1,300 such illegal services as of 2026. So stick to the official methods I listed above. They are all free anyway, so why take the risk?
Quick Tips to Stay Safe (Five Habits That Actually Help)
Honestly, prevention is way easier than recovery. So here are five habits I personally follow, and I think you should too.
- Send 668 once a month. Pick the first of every month. Set a phone reminder. Ten seconds of work catches unauthorized SIMs before they cause damage.
- Stop sending CNIC photos to strangers. Most SIM fraud in Pakistan starts with a leaked CNIC photo. Job offers, prize schemes, fake loan applications — these are all common pretexts. Just say no.
- Only buy SIMs from biometric retailers. If a shopkeeper offers you a Zong SIM without a thumb impression, walk away. That SIM can be deactivated by PTA at any time, and you will lose the number.
- Verify unknown 0310 callers. Use Live Tracker or 667 before you call back a strange Zong number. If something looks off in the registration, do not engage.
- Register Zong SIMs only under your own CNIC. Never under your mother’s, sister’s, or friend’s. Even with their permission. The CNIC holder takes the legal hit if anything goes wrong.
FAQs People Actually Ask
How do I check Zong SIM owner details for free?
Insert the Zong SIM into your phone and send the word MNP to 667. You receive the registered owner name within ten seconds. Alternatively, send your 13-digit CNIC to 668 to see how many Zong SIMs sit on your identity. Both methods are official PTA services.
Can I find out who owns a Zong number that called me?
Pakistani law (PECA 2016) does not allow you to pull up another person’s full Zong owner details just from their number. However, you can check publicly available registration info through Live Tracker. For harassment or threats, file a complaint at complaint.fia.gov.pk and the FIA will investigate.
What does the prefix 0310 mean?
0310 is the original Zong prefix issued by China Mobile Pakistan. So a number starting with 0310 was originally on Zong. However, Mobile Number Portability lets people switch operators while keeping their number, so always verify the current operator using 667 or Live Tracker.
How many Zong SIMs can I keep on one CNIC?
PTA caps every CNIC at 5 voice SIMs and 3 data-only SIMs across all networks combined. Therefore, your Zong total counts toward the same 8-SIM ceiling alongside your Jazz, Telenor, Ufone, and SCOM SIMs. Going over the limit triggers automatic blocking of newer SIMs.
Is the My Zong app safe to use?
Yes — as long as you download it from Google Play or the Apple App Store. The app uses OTP login and encrypted connections. Just avoid third-party APK sites or random WhatsApp links claiming to offer “modded” Zong apps. Those are usually malware.
Does sending CNIC to 668 show me my actual Zong numbers?
No. The 668 service only shows the count — for example, “Zong: 2 SIMs.” To see the actual phone numbers, you must visit a Zong Customer Service Centre with your original CNIC and ask for the SIM ownership list after biometric verification.
How long does Zong take to block an unauthorized SIM?
Once you submit the disowning request at a Zong CSC after biometric verification, the SIM typically gets blocked within 24 to 48 hours. To confirm it worked, send your CNIC to 668 again after 18 days. The Zong count should drop by one.
Are paid SIM database sites safe to use for Zong checks?
Honestly, no. Most paid SIM database sites operate illegally under PECA 2016 and NCCIA guidelines. PTA has blocked over 1,300 of them. The FIA actively prosecutes both operators and users. Stick to the eight official methods in this guide — they are free and completely legal.
Can overseas Pakistanis check Zong SIM owner details from abroad?
Yes. Overseas Pakistanis can use the My Zong app, the cnic.sims.pk portal, and Live Tracker from anywhere. However, the SMS shortcodes (667, 668, 7911) need an active Pakistani SIM in roaming. Disowning unauthorized SIMs still requires a CSC visit on return or a notarized power of attorney for a family member to act on your behalf.
Why should I check my Zong SIM owner details monthly?
Because every day an unauthorized Zong SIM stays active under your CNIC increases your legal liability. Criminals can use it for fraud, harassment, or worse — and the trail leads back to you. Monthly checks via 668 take ten seconds and catch issues before they snowball.
Related Reading on Live Tracker
Want to go deeper into SIM verification and mobile security in Pakistan? Check these out:
- Pakistani Mobile Networks 2026 — Complete Guide to Jazz, Zong, Telenor, Ufone & SCOM (Pillar Page)
- SIM Owner Details Pakistan — Check Name, CNIC & Network
- Complete Guide to Checking SIM Information with CNIC
- Live Tracker for Mobile and SIM in Pakistan
- The Future of Live Tracker Technology & Real-Time GPS
- All Live Tracker Updates & Blogs
Sources We Used
This guide draws on data from the following official and high-authority sources:
- Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) — National telecom regulator
- NADRA — Biometric verification framework
- Zong (CMPak) — Official Zong consumer information
- PTA SIM Information System (cnic.sims.pk) — Official CNIC SIM registry portal
- PTA Complaint Portal — Consumer complaint filing
- FIA Cybercrime Complaint Portal — Identity theft and SIM-swap fraud reporting
- GSMA — Global telecom industry research