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Your phone keeps showing as Private when you call people, and you have no idea why. It's frustrating. People stop picking up because they think you're spam or a telemarketer. I get it—I went through the same thing.
Turns out, removing a private number from your phone isn't always obvious. Sometimes it's buried in settings you never knew existed. Sometimes it's your carrier blocking it. Sometimes it's a feature on your phone that got turned on by accident. Let me walk you through how to actually fix this.
If you're on Android, the process usually starts in your Phone app. Open it, hit the three dots, and look for Settings or Call Settings. You'll want to find something called Calling accounts or Supplementary services. From there, tap into Additional settings and look for Caller ID. You should see an option to Show number or Network default—select that. Your network will send a confirmation when it updates.
Now, different Android phones put these options in different places. If you've got a Realme device, for example, the steps are slightly different. Open the Phone app, tap the menu icon, go to Settings, then Calling accounts. Pick your SIM (MTN, Airtel, whatever carrier you use), tap Additional settings, and find Caller ID. Choose Show number and confirm.
Samsung, Google, Xiaomi, Infinix—they all organize things a bit differently, but the goal is the same: you're telling your network to display your actual number instead of hiding it.
One thing that might block you: if your phone has Advanced Protection turned on (Settings > Security and privacy > Advanced Protection), it can lock down your Caller ID settings and grey them out. You'll need to check that first.
If changing the setting doesn't stick, try resetting your phone app. Go to Settings, find Apps, select See all apps, locate the Phone app, tap Storage and cache, then Clear storage and Clear cache. Restart your phone so it reconnects to your carrier. This usually fixes sync issues between your phone and the network.
For iPhone users on iOS 26, things got reorganized. Apple moved phone settings into the Apps section now. Open Settings, scroll to Apps, tap Phone, then look for Show My Caller ID. Turn that switch on—it should go green. Done.
If you've got multiple lines (eSIM and physical SIM), you need to enable Show My Caller ID for each one separately. Otherwise your number might still show as Private on some calls.
Sometimes the option just isn't there. That usually means your carrier controls it at the account level, which happens with some networks. Also, if you've got a work or school profile set up on your phone (check Settings > General > VPN and Device Management), it might be blocking your caller ID settings.
Older iPhones like the 14 and 15 sometimes glitch after updating to iOS 26. If that's you, close the Phone app, restart your iPhone, then check Settings > General > About to see if there's a carrier settings update available.
Now here's the thing: even if your phone says Caller ID is on, your calls might still show as Private to other people. That's usually a carrier network issue, not your phone.
You can use USSD codes to talk directly to your carrier network. Dial *31# to make your number visible on all outgoing calls. If you're on MTN in Nigeria, try #31# to disable caller ID for the opposite effect. Dial *#31# to check if your caller ID is restricted or allowed. Or use #31# followed by a phone number (like #31#08031234567) if you want to hide your number for just one call.
If that doesn't work, reset your network settings. On Android 16, go to Settings > System > Reset options, tap Reset mobile network settings, and confirm. This also clears your saved Wi-Fi passwords and Bluetooth connections, so be ready for that.
On iOS 26, go to Settings > General > Transfer or Reset iPhone, tap Reset, then Reset Network Settings. Your phone will restart and reconnect to your carrier.
A few other things that can cause this: privacy apps like Truecaller, Hiya, or RoboKiller might be hiding your number if they have deep system access. Switching between modern and older network types can mess with caller ID. If your SIM card is older than five years, it might struggle with 5G Standalone networks—replacing it or switching to eSIM sometimes helps. When you're roaming or making international calls, the caller ID signal can get lost as it passes through different networks.
Go through your phone settings, check your carrier tools, and verify your network profile. Usually one of these steps will get your number showing correctly again instead of appearing as Private.