IMEI verification on PTA's DIRBS portal confirms whether a specific device is registered, blocked, or listed as stolen — the IMEI is found by dialling *#06# on any phone regardless of whether a SIM is inserted.

Three Checks That Take 3 Minutes and Save Thousands

Three quick verification steps before any second-hand phone purchase in Pakistan: check the IMEI via 8484 SMS (30 seconds), verify the model matches on dirbs.pta.gov.pk (60 seconds), physically confirm the IMEI on the device matches (30 seconds). All three together take under 3 minutes and completely eliminate the most common phone fraud scenarios in Pakistan's used phone market. Skipping even one of these creates a vulnerability a fraudulent seller can exploit.

Step 1

Three Ways to Find Your IMEI

Every mobile phone has a unique 15-digit IMEI. Find it using any of these methods: dial *#06# on any mobile phone — the IMEI displays immediately and this works on every device regardless of brand; check Settings then About Phone then IMEI on Android devices, or Settings then General then About on iPhones; or look at the IMEI printed on the original retail box and (on some older models) on a label under the battery or on the back panel. Dual-SIM phones have two separate IMEIs — check and verify both.

Step 2

Check IMEI at the DIRBS Portal

Go to dirbs.pta.gov.pk and use the IMEI Check tool — no login required for a basic check. Enter the 15-digit IMEI without any spaces or dashes. The result shows: the phone make and model that GSMA's global database associates with this IMEI; the registration and compliance status for Pakistani networks; and whether the IMEI is on the stolen device blacklist. This information is what you need to verify before any second-hand phone purchase.

Step 3

Quick Verification via SMS to 8484

Send the IMEI number as an SMS to 8484 from any phone with a Pakistani SIM card. The reply arrives within approximately 30 seconds and shows the compliance status (Compliant, Non-Compliant, or Stolen) along with the associated device brand and model name. This is the fastest method for a field check when you don't have internet access for the DIRBS portal.

Step 4

Complete Pre-Purchase Verification Checklist

Before buying any second-hand mobile phone, run this three-step check: Step 1: Dial *#06# on the device and confirm the displayed IMEI exactly matches the IMEI on the box or back label. Step 2: SMS the IMEI to 8484 — confirm the result is Compliant and the device model name matches what is being offered for sale. Step 3: Check dirbs.pta.gov.pk — confirm the IMEI isn't on the stolen device register. If all three pass, the device is legitimate and safe to purchase.

Device and SIM Problems

DIRBS shows a different phone model for the IMEI I entered

IMEI cloning — the IMEI from another device has been illegally programmed onto this phone. This is a definitive indicator of a stolen or counterfeit device. Don't proceed with the purchase under any circumstances.

The IMEI on the phone does not match the IMEI on the box

Either the box is from a different phone, or the phone's IMEI has been modified. Both scenarios are serious red flags. Don't purchase this device.

Frequently Asked Questions

No — IMEI modification is a criminal offence under Pakistan's Electronic Transactions Ordinance 2002. Any phone with a modified, erased, or cloned IMEI is direct evidence of criminal activity.

No — the IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity) is the network identifier used by mobile operators to track devices on their networks. The serial number is the manufacturer's own device identifier used for warranty and service. Both are unique to a specific device but serve different purposes.

Every phone displays its IMEI by dialing *#06# — this code works regardless of whether the phone is locked, and regardless of which SIM (or no SIM) is in the phone. This is the most reliable method. The IMEI also appears on the original retail box (printed on a label) and on some phones, on a label under the battery.

Yes — DIRBS only shows 'Stolen' if the original owner reported it stolen through the official DIRBS stolen device reporting system. If the theft wasn't reported, the IMEI still shows as Compliant. This is why a seller's refusal to let you insert your own SIM and make a test call is also a red flag — a stolen phone may not have any SIM issue, but a reluctant seller is one.

No — DIRBS only tracks registration and blacklist status, not manufacturer warranty. Warranty status is checked with the manufacturer's own warranty verification system (most brands have online lookup tools) or directly at an authorised service centre.