Samsung IMEI Check

Free Samsung IMEI checker — verify warranty status, blacklist, carrier lock, Knox Guard and more. Check any Galaxy S, Z Fold, Z Flip or A series phone before buying.

Or use our universal IMEI checker for all brands.

Please enter your Samsung IMEI or Serial Number.

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What Information Can You Get from a Samsung IMEI Check?

Our Samsung IMEI checker retrieves data from Samsung's warranty servers and global carrier networks. Here is what your report includes:

Model & Description

Full Samsung model number (e.g., SM-S928BZKDEUE), model name (Galaxy S25 Ultra), color, and storage capacity. Confirms the exact device so sellers cannot misrepresent what they are selling.

Manufacturer & Factory

Which Samsung factory built the device (e.g., SEHV = Vietnam, SEC = Korea, SEDA = China, SEHI = India, SEHZ = Brazil). Helps verify authenticity — counterfeit phones will not return valid factory data.

Warranty Status & Dates

Whether Samsung's warranty is active or expired, with exact start and end dates. Also shows the original production date and ship date. Critical for verifying true device age.

Blacklist Status

Whether the phone has been reported lost, stolen, or blocked by any carrier worldwide through the global blacklist. A blacklisted Samsung phone cannot connect to cellular networks. For a dedicated lookup, use our IMEI Blacklist Check.

Knox Guard Status

Whether Samsung Knox Guard is active on the device. Knox Guard allows carriers, insurance companies, and employers to remotely lock the phone. Statuses include OFF, Active, Locked, or Completed. Knox Guard verification may require an extended check. See our detailed Knox Guard explanation below.

Carrier & SIM Lock

The original carrier (e.g., AT&T, Vodafone, Orange) and whether the phone is SIM-locked or factory unlocked. Shows the "Sales Buyer" (original carrier that purchased from Samsung) and current lock status.

Sales & Ship Country

Two separate data points: the country where the device was sold and the country it was shipped to. When these differ, the device may be a grey import with limited local warranty.

Production, Ship & Sold Dates

Three dates: when the phone was manufactured, when Samsung shipped it, and when it was sold to the first buyer. A phone produced 2 years ago but sold as "new" is a red flag.

Serial Number & IMEI2

The device serial number, DO Number (delivery order), SKU code, and second IMEI for dual-SIM models. Useful for cross-referencing warranty claims with Samsung support.

SKU & Product Code

The full Samsung SKU (e.g., SM2S928BZKDEUE) which encodes the model, color, region, and carrier variant. Confirms the exact regional specification of the device.

Finance / Loan Status

Whether the device has an outstanding financial obligation (installment plan, lease, or loan). A phone marked as financed may still be under contract — if the original owner stops paying, the carrier can blacklist it.

Original / Authenticity

Whether Samsung's servers recognize the IMEI as a valid Samsung device. If the IMEI is not found in Samsung's database, the device may be counterfeit or tampered with.


Which IMEI Should You Check? IMEI1 vs IMEI2

Most Samsung Galaxy phones are dual-SIM devices — they have two IMEI numbers. IMEI1 is assigned to the primary SIM slot, and IMEI2 is assigned to the secondary SIM slot or eSIM. When you dial *#06# on your Samsung phone, both numbers are displayed.

Always use IMEI1 for verification. Here is why:

When a phone is reported lost or stolen, carriers typically blacklist IMEI1 — the primary identifier. In many cases, IMEI2 may remain clean even when the device is blacklisted. This means checking only IMEI2 can give a false "clean" result and lead you to purchase a blocked phone.

The same applies to warranty, Knox Guard status, and carrier lock information — Samsung's servers index device records primarily by IMEI1. Checking IMEI2 may return incomplete or inaccurate data.

How to identify IMEI1: Dial *#06# — IMEI1 is always listed first. In Settings → About Phone, it is labeled "IMEI (Slot 1)" or simply "IMEI." IMEI2 is labeled "IMEI (Slot 2)" or "IMEI2."

You do not need to check both. If you verify IMEI1 and the result is clean, there is no need to also check IMEI2. One check on IMEI1 gives you the full picture.


How to Find Your Samsung IMEI Number

1

Dial *#06#

Open the Phone app and dial *#06#. Your IMEI1, IMEI2 (for dual-SIM models), and serial number will appear instantly. This works on every Samsung Galaxy phone and tablet with cellular connectivity.

2

Check Settings

Go to Settings → About Phone (or About Tablet). Your IMEI, serial number, and model number are listed there. On newer One UI versions, also under Settings → About Phone → Status Information.

3

Original Box or SIM Tray

The IMEI is printed on a sticker on the original Samsung box. On some older models with removable batteries, it is also printed under the battery. On newer Galaxy phones, check the SIM card tray.

4

Samsung Members App

Open the Samsung Members app (pre-installed on all Galaxy devices) and tap the Support tab, then tap your device name at the top. Your IMEI, serial number, and model details are displayed there.

Tip: If you are buying used and do not have the phone in hand, ask the seller to provide the IMEI from Settings → About Phone. Compare it with the IMEI printed on the original box — if they do not match, the mainboard may have been replaced.

Samsung Security Locks Explained: Knox Guard, MDM, Samsung Account & Google FRP

Samsung Galaxy phones can have up to four different types of security locks. Each one works independently — a phone can have one, multiple, or none of them active. Understanding these locks is critical before buying a used Samsung, because some of them cannot be removed by factory reset and can permanently block access to the device.

Knox Guard

Samsung Knox Guard is a cloud-based device management platform that allows carriers, insurance companies, leasing providers, and enterprise organizations to remotely control Samsung devices. It is primarily used for fraud and theft protection on financed devices.

How Knox Guard works: When a carrier sells you a Samsung phone on installments, they register the device's IMEI in the Knox Guard console. From that point, the carrier can remotely lock the phone, display custom messages on the lock screen, restrict app installation, control SIM card changes, and even wipe the device — all without physical access.

Knox Guard status flow (from Samsung's official documentation):

Knox Guard devices go through a defined lifecycle of states:

  • OFF — The device has never been enrolled in Knox Guard, or it was never accepted into the system. This is the ideal status for used phone buyers. No restrictions exist.
  • Pending — The device IMEI has been uploaded to the Knox Guard console by a reseller, but not yet accepted by the managing organization. The device is not yet controlled.
  • Activating — The device was accepted in Knox Guard, but has not yet connected to the internet to complete activation. Knox Guard will automatically activate when the device boots up and connects to a network (within 7 days of first boot).
  • Active — The device is actively managed by Knox Guard. The managing organization can lock, unlock, send notifications, restrict apps, control SIM changes, block factory reset, and apply various policies. A phone in Active state can be locked at any moment.
  • Locked — The managing organization has remotely locked the device. The phone displays a lock screen message and is completely unusable. This typically happens when a financed phone has unpaid installments.
  • Completing — The managing organization has marked the device for release. There is a 2-day grace period during which this can be reversed.
  • Completed — Knox Guard management is finished. The Knox Guard client is permanently uninstalled from the device. This is a safe status for buyers — it means the phone was previously managed (e.g., financed) but has been fully released. The device cannot be re-locked through Knox Guard.
Knox Guard cannot be removed by factory reset. Even if you wipe the phone completely, Knox Guard will re-activate when the device connects to the internet. Only the managing organization (carrier, insurance company, or employer) can release a device from Knox Guard by marking it as "Completed."
A factory reset alone does NOT prove a Samsung phone is clean. Knox Guard, MDM, and Samsung Account Lock all survive a factory reset — they re-activate the moment the device connects to the internet (Wi-Fi or mobile data). A phone that appears clean in offline/airplane mode can become locked instantly once it goes online. If you cannot verify the IMEI before buying, you MUST connect the device to the internet during the in-person meeting and complete the full initial setup — including signing in with your own Google and Samsung accounts — before paying. If any lock screen, enterprise enrollment prompt, or account verification appears during this process, do not purchase the device.

MDM — Mobile Device Management

MDM is a broader category of enterprise software that allows organizations to remotely manage, configure, and secure employee devices. Samsung supports MDM through Knox Mobile Enrollment (KME) and Knox Manage, as well as third-party solutions like Microsoft Intune, VMware Workspace ONE, and ManageEngine.

When a Samsung phone is enrolled in MDM, the organization can enforce password policies, restrict which apps can be installed, disable camera or screen capture, prevent factory reset, block USB debugging, and remotely wipe the device.

Why MDM matters when buying used: Enterprise devices that have been resold — sometimes without the company's knowledge — may still be enrolled in MDM. The phone might work normally for weeks or months, then suddenly get locked when the company's admin pushes a new policy or notices the device is still active. MDM enrollment persists through factory reset — when the device connects to the internet after a reset, it automatically re-enrolls into the organization's MDM system. Unlike Knox Guard, MDM enrollment may not be visible in a standard IMEI check — but in some cases, the Knox Guard status can indicate enterprise enrollment.

How to check manually: On the device, go to Settings → Biometrics and Security → Device Admin Apps. If you see entries like "KC Client," "Knox Enrollment Service," or any unfamiliar management app, the device may be MDM-enrolled. Ask the seller to have the organization remove the MDM profile before purchasing.

Samsung Account Lock (Reactivation Lock)

Samsung Account Lock — also called Reactivation Lock — is Samsung's anti-theft feature, similar to Apple's Activation Lock. When enabled through Samsung's Find My Mobile service, the device requires the original Samsung account credentials after a factory reset.

This feature is tied to the Samsung account (not Google), and it must be manually enabled by the user in Settings → Biometrics and Security → Find My Mobile → Reactivation Lock. It is not enabled by default on most models.

Why it matters when buying used: If the seller performed a factory reset without removing their Samsung account, the phone will ask for their Samsung account email and password during setup. Without these credentials, the phone cannot be activated. Only the original Samsung account owner can disable this — Samsung support will only assist with proof of ownership (purchase receipt + matching IMEI).

Before buying: Ask the seller to sign out of their Samsung account (Settings → Accounts → Samsung Account → Remove Account) and disable Find My Mobile. Then connect the device to the internet and verify the setup completes without asking for any Samsung account credentials. Samsung Reactivation Lock only triggers during the setup process when the device is online. If they cannot complete this process in front of you, do not purchase the device.

Google Account Lock (FRP — Factory Reset Protection)

Factory Reset Protection (FRP) is a security feature built into Android 5.1 and later — it is not Samsung-specific, but affects all Samsung Galaxy phones. FRP activates automatically when you add a Google account and set a screen lock. After a factory reset (performed through recovery mode or remote wipe), the phone requires the previously synced Google account credentials before it can be set up again.

FRP cannot be detected through an IMEI check. There is no remote database that stores FRP status by IMEI — it is stored locally on the device. This makes it a risk that can only be verified with the phone in hand.

Why it matters when buying used: If the previous owner factory reset their Samsung phone without first removing their Google account, you will be locked out at the setup screen. The phone will display "This device was reset. To continue, sign in with a Google Account that was previously synced on this device." Without the correct Google credentials, the phone is unusable.

Before buying: Ask the seller to perform the factory reset in front of you from Settings → General Management → Reset → Factory Data Reset (not from recovery mode). When done through Settings, FRP is properly cleared. After the reset, immediately connect the phone to Wi-Fi and go through the entire initial setup process. FRP only triggers when the device connects to the internet during setup — a phone that was reset but kept offline will appear clean until it goes online. If the phone asks for a Google account you do not own during setup, do not purchase the device.

Lock Type Who Controls It Survives Factory Reset? Visible in IMEI Check? How to Verify
Knox Guard Carrier / Insurance / Employer Yes — re-activates on internet Yes — via IMEI check Run a Samsung IMEI check with Knox Guard verification
MDM Employer / Organization Yes — auto re-enrolls on internet Partially — may show as Knox Guard Active Check Settings → Device Admin Apps on device
Samsung Account Lock Device owner (Samsung account) Yes — triggers during setup on internet No Ask seller to sign out + connect to internet during meeting
Google FRP Device owner (Google account) Yes — triggers during setup on internet No Ask seller to factory reset from Settings + complete full setup online
Important: All four lock types re-activate only when the device connects to the internet. A phone in airplane mode or without SIM/Wi-Fi may appear completely clean. Always test with an active internet connection before purchasing.

What Do the Results Mean?

Blacklist: CLEAN — Not reported lost or stolen. Safe to use on all carrier networks.

Blacklist: BLACKLISTED — Reported to the blacklist. Blocked from cellular networks. Do not buy.

Knox Guard: OFF — No remote lock restrictions. The device was never enrolled in Knox Guard. Safe to buy.

Knox Guard: Completed — Previously managed by Knox Guard (e.g., financed phone fully paid off). Knox Guard has been permanently uninstalled. Safe to buy.

Knox Guard: Active — Currently managed through Knox Guard. The device can be remotely locked at any time. Do not buy unless the seller can prove release.

Knox Guard: Locked — The managing organization has remotely locked the device. The phone is currently unusable. Do not buy.

SIM Lock: Open (Unlocked) — Factory unlocked. Works with any SIM card from any carrier worldwide.

SIM Lock: Locked — Restricted to the original carrier network. Must be unlocked before switching operators.

Warranty: Active — Samsung's warranty is valid. The report shows exact start and end dates.

Warranty: Expired — Warranty has ended. Repairs are at full price.

Finance: No — No outstanding financial obligations on the device.

Finance: Yes — The device has an active loan, lease, or installment plan. If payments stop, the carrier can blacklist it.

IMEI Valid / Original — Samsung's servers recognize the IMEI. The device is a genuine Samsung product.

IMEI Not Found — Samsung's database does not recognize this IMEI. The device may be counterfeit, refurbished with a replaced mainboard, or tampered with.


Why Check a Samsung Galaxy IMEI Before Buying?

Check Knox Guard & MDM status

Knox Guard and MDM enrollment allow carriers and employers to remotely lock the phone at any time. A factory reset will not remove these locks — they re-activate the moment the phone connects to the internet. Verify Knox Guard status through an IMEI check before buying.

Detect stolen or blacklisted phones

A blacklisted Samsung phone is permanently blocked from cellular networks. Always check using IMEI1 (the primary IMEI) — IMEI2 may show clean even when the phone is actually blacklisted.

Verify SIM lock and carrier

A Galaxy phone locked to T-Mobile US will not work with European operators. Our check reveals the exact carrier and lock status, so you know whether an unlock is needed.

Confirm warranty coverage

Samsung warranty includes exact dates: production, ship, sold, and warranty end. Our check shows all four, so you can verify how old the device truly is and whether it is still covered.

Identify grey imports

A phone sold in one country but shipped to another may have limited warranty and miss regional features (carrier bands, software). Our check shows both Sold By Country and Ship To Country.

Verify it is a genuine Samsung

Counterfeit Galaxy phones are common on marketplaces. Our IMEI check verifies the device against Samsung's official database. If the IMEI is not found, the phone may be fake.


How to Check If a Samsung Phone Is Stolen Before Buying

Unlike iPhones which have a visible iCloud lock, stolen Samsung phones are harder to detect. This makes checking the IMEI essential before any purchase.

Here is the complete verification process:

Step 1 — Get the correct IMEI. Ask the seller for the IMEI from Settings → About Phone. Make sure they provide IMEI1 (the first IMEI listed). If they only provide IMEI2, ask for IMEI1 specifically — IMEI2 may show a clean blacklist even when the device is actually blocked.

Step 2 — Run our check. Enter IMEI1 above. Your report will show the Blacklist Status, Knox Guard Status, and Finance Status — the three critical fields for detecting stolen or problematic devices.

Step 3 — Check for red flags:

  • Blacklisted — The phone was reported lost or stolen and is blocked by carriers. Run a full check on our IMEI Blacklist Check page.
  • Knox Guard: Active or Locked — The device is registered by a carrier, insurance company, or employer and can be locked remotely at any time.
  • Finance: Yes — Outstanding installment plan. If payments stop, the phone gets blacklisted.
  • IMEI Not Found — Samsung's database does not recognize the device. It may be counterfeit or have a replaced mainboard.
  • Sold By Country does not match seller's location — Could indicate a grey import or suspicious sourcing.

Step 4 — In-person verification (critical). When meeting the seller, check Settings → Biometrics and Security → Device Admin Apps for MDM enrollment. Ask them to sign out of both their Samsung account and Google account in front of you, then perform a factory reset from Settings (not recovery mode) to clear FRP. After the reset, connect the device to Wi-Fi or mobile data immediately — do not pay until you have completed the full initial setup with the phone connected to the internet. Knox Guard, MDM, Samsung Account Lock, and FRP all re-activate only when the device goes online. A phone that looks clean in airplane mode can become locked the moment it connects. Set up the phone with your own Google and Samsung accounts and verify everything works before paying.

If Blacklist shows CLEAN, Knox Guard shows OFF or Completed, Finance shows No, and the IMEI is recognized as valid — the phone is most likely safe to purchase.


Supported Samsung Models

Our checker supports every Samsung Galaxy device ever released:

Galaxy S26 Series (2026)
Galaxy S26 S26+ S26 Ultra
Galaxy S25 Series (2025)
Galaxy S25 S25+ S25 Ultra S25 Edge S25 FE
Galaxy S24 Series (2024)
Galaxy S24 S24+ S24 Ultra S24 FE
Galaxy S23 Series (2023)
Galaxy S23 S23+ S23 Ultra S23 FE
Galaxy S22 Series (2022)
Galaxy S22 S22+ S22 Ultra
Galaxy S21 Series (2021)
Galaxy S21 S21+ S21 Ultra S21 FE
Galaxy Z Fold
Z Fold7 Z Fold6 Z Fold5 Z Fold4 Z Fold3 Z Fold2 Fold
Galaxy Z Flip
Z Flip7 Z Flip6 Z Flip5 Z Flip4 Z Flip3 Z Flip Z Flip 5G
Galaxy A Series
A56 A55 A54 A53 A52 A36 A35 A34 A33 A26 A25 A24 A16 A15 A14 A06 A05
Galaxy M Series
M55 M54 M53 M34 M33 M15 M14
Galaxy F Series
F55 F54 F34 F15
Galaxy Note (legacy)
Note 20 Ultra Note 20 Note 10+ Note 10 Note 9 Note 8
Galaxy Tab (tablets)
Tab S10 Tab S9 Tab S8 Tab A9 Tab A8 Tab Active5 Tab Active4 Pro

Also supports all older Galaxy S, J, On, and XCover series models.


Frequently Asked Questions

The IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity) is a unique 15-digit number assigned to every Samsung phone during manufacturing. It identifies your specific device on cellular networks. Dual-SIM Samsung phones have two IMEI numbers — IMEI1 for the primary SIM slot and IMEI2 for the secondary slot. Find yours by dialing *#06# or in Settings → About Phone.
Always check IMEI1. When a phone is reported lost or stolen, carriers blacklist IMEI1 — the primary identifier. IMEI2 may show a clean status even on a blacklisted device. Samsung's warranty and Knox Guard records are also indexed by IMEI1. If you verify IMEI1 and the result is clean, you do not need to also check IMEI2.
Yes. Our basic check is free and includes model info, warranty status, blacklist status, carrier details, and production dates. Extended reports — including Knox Guard verification, detailed MDM status, and finance/loan information — are available as paid services.
Knox Guard is Samsung's cloud-based remote device management platform. It allows carriers, insurance companies, leasing providers, and employers to remotely lock, unlock, restrict, and wipe Samsung devices. Knox Guard is commonly used on financed phones — if you stop paying installments, the carrier can lock the device remotely. Knox Guard cannot be removed by factory reset — it re-activates automatically when the device connects to the internet after a reset. Only the managing organization can release a device by marking it as "Completed" in the Knox Guard console.
Knox Guard "Completed" means the device was previously enrolled in Knox Guard (e.g., a financed phone), but the managing organization has permanently released it. The Knox Guard client is uninstalled and the phone cannot be re-locked. This is a safe status — it is equivalent to a clean phone for all practical purposes.
Knox Guard is Samsung's specific cloud platform for device control — it is tied to Samsung's own Knox servers. MDM (Mobile Device Management) is a broader category that includes third-party solutions like Microsoft Intune, VMware Workspace ONE, and Samsung's own Knox Manage. Both allow remote device control, but Knox Guard status is visible in our IMEI check, while third-party MDM enrollment typically is not. Check Settings → Device Admin Apps on the phone itself to detect MDM.
FRP is Google's anti-theft feature on Android devices. After a factory reset, the phone requires the previously linked Google account credentials. FRP status cannot be checked by IMEI — it is stored locally on the device, not in any remote database. To avoid FRP issues, ask the seller to factory reset from Settings (not recovery mode), then connect the phone to the internet and complete the full setup in front of you. FRP only triggers when the device goes online during setup — a phone kept offline after reset will appear clean.
Samsung Reactivation Lock is a security feature linked to the Samsung account (not Google). When enabled via Find My Mobile, the device requires the original Samsung account credentials after a factory reset. It is similar to Apple's Activation Lock. This cannot be detected by IMEI check — ask the seller to sign out of their Samsung account and disable Find My Mobile before purchasing.
Enter IMEI1 in our checker. If the Blacklist Status shows "BLACKLISTED," the device was reported lost or stolen. Also verify Knox Guard status — if it shows "Active" or "Locked," the device may have been insurance-claimed or has unpaid installments. Check Finance status for outstanding loans. Always use IMEI1 for blacklist checks, as IMEI2 may show clean even on a blocked device. For a dedicated blacklist check, use our IMEI Blacklist Check.
Enter the IMEI in our checker. The Carrier field shows the original network, and the SIM Lock field shows whether it is "Open" (unlocked) or locked. "Carrier: Open" means factory unlocked — it works with any SIM card worldwide.
Yes. Our checker accepts both IMEI and serial number. Both return device information including model, warranty, and production details.
Enter the IMEI in our checker. If Samsung's servers return valid device data (model, production date, factory code), the phone is genuine. If the result shows "IMEI Not Found" or returns no Samsung data, the device may be counterfeit. Also verify that the model number in Settings matches what our check returns.
"Sold By Country" is where the carrier or retailer purchased the device from Samsung. "Ship To Country" is where Samsung shipped it. When these differ, the device may be a grey import — manufactured for one region but sold in another. This can affect warranty coverage and carrier band compatibility.
Yes. Samsung's servers provide three dates: Production Date (when the phone was manufactured), Ship Date (when Samsung shipped it to the retailer), and Sold Date (when the first buyer purchased it). This is more detailed than most other brands and helps verify the true age of a device.
Yes. Our checker supports all Samsung tablets with IMEI numbers (Galaxy Tab S series, Tab A series, Tab Active series). Wi-Fi-only tablets do not have IMEI numbers and can only be checked by serial number.
"Carrier: Open" means the Samsung device is factory unlocked — it was not sold through a specific carrier and has no SIM restrictions. It works with any compatible SIM card or eSIM from any operator worldwide. This is the ideal status for a used Samsung purchase.


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*Dial *#06# to find your Phone's IMEI Number or find it in your phone's settings.

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