What call screening should mean in 2026
Traditional call screening usually means deciding whether to answer after the phone rings. CallerPass moves that decision earlier. Unknown callers meet a controlled access layer before they interrupt your personal phone.
That matters because some unknown calls are legitimate. A doctor, client, school, delivery driver, or new customer may not be in your contacts. The goal is not to block everyone. The goal is to require context before access.
Stop giving strangers direct access to your phone.
Protect My NumberThe CallerPass approach
Trusted people can be allowed through. Unknown callers are screened. Your real number stays protected behind a reachable CallerPass number.
Instead of asking only whether a caller is spam, CallerPass asks the more useful question: should this caller have access to you?
Who call screening is for
Call screening is useful for anyone whose phone is both personal and operational: small business owners, real estate agents, creators, contractors, caregivers, and people selling online.
If missing important calls is not an option, but giving strangers direct access feels unsafe, CallerPass is built for that middle ground.
Ready to control who reaches you?
CallerPass is built around phone access control, not generic spam blocking.
FAQ
Is CallerPass a spam blocker?
CallerPass is not positioned as another generic spam blocker. It is an access-control layer for your phone, built to screen unknown callers and protect your personal number before strangers get direct access.
Can I still receive important calls?
Yes. CallerPass is designed for people who need to stay reachable. Trusted contacts can get through, while unknown callers are screened first so you do not have to choose between privacy and availability.
Does CallerPass replace my carrier's spam filtering?
No. Carrier spam filtering can still help identify suspicious calls. CallerPass adds a separate privacy layer focused on who should have access to you.