Free temporary Lithuania phone number to receive SMS online (+370)
Pick a Lithuania number below and read the code right on this page. You do not sign up, you do not give your own phone, and you pay nothing.
These are shared public lines, so anyone can view the same messages. Good for a quick test, not for an account you want to keep. Want a private line? Browse free SMS numbers online too.
Which apps send a code to these shared numbers
Not every service will text a shared line. Some let the code through, some block it on sight. Here is what tends to work and what usually does not.
What the shared line handles fineTested
Smaller sites and apps with light checks send the code through without fuss. If a service only wants to confirm you are a real visitor, these shared phone numbers are usually enough.
Services that often accept these numbers
These platforms tend to take shared +370 numbers and let you sign in or register:
No promise here, but each one is worth a shot before you spend anything. Try a shared number first and see if the code lands.
Popular apps that usually refuse itOften blocked
Big platforms keep a list of shared lines and reject the verification on the spot. The code never arrives, or it lands but the account gets flagged a day later.
If you need one of these, skip the shared route and use a private phone number that only you can read.
The rule of thumb
If it holds your data, do not use a shared line.
A throwaway sign-up is fine on a public line. Anything with your name, money, or personal info needs a private one.
Catch a fresh number fast
Shared lines get used by many people, so the newest one gives you the best odds. Here is the quick way to grab it:
How to receive an SMS on a Lithuania phone number
The whole flow takes under a minute. You do not need an app, an email, or any sign-up to read the message.
When to switch to a paid line
A shared line falls short when:
The fix: a private Lithuanian line from $1 that nobody else can touch. See the option below →
If the shared line did the job, you are done. It costs nothing, so move on.
A private Lithuania number for $1
When the shared route fails, a private line is the simple next step. It is yours for the session, the message is yours alone, and the price is tiny.
Pay only when a real line is reserved for you.
What you get for the dollar
No code arrives? You are not charged. You pay for a working number, not a failed attempt.
Why a private line beats the shared one
The shared line is used by many people, so it is busy and often already burned. A private line is clean and quiet, which is exactly what a strict service wants to see.
For a quick throwaway, the shared option is fine. For anything that needs to stick, the dollar saves you the headache of retries that go nowhere.
When even a paid line will not work
Be straight with yourself: a temporary phone number, shared or paid, is not the right tool for everything.
For those cases you want a real SIM from Telia, Bite, or Tele2 that stays in your own pocket.
Quick filter before you choose
Ask one thing: will you need to log in again next year? Yes means a real SIM. No means a temporary line is perfect.
Burner sims, VoIP, and eSIM: worth it?
People often reach for these three before temporary numbers. Here is how each one stacks up for getting a code in the country.
A burner SIM from a kiosk
You buy a prepaid SIM in Vilnius or Kaunas, register it, and top it up. That is real effort and cost for a single sign-up you may never touch again.
A VoIP number
VoIP numbers look cheap, but many services spot them and block the code outright. You can spend an hour setting one up and still get nowhere.
A travel eSIM
An eSIM is great for data when you visit Klaipeda, but most do not give you a real Lithuanian line that can receive an SMS code.
When these actually make sense
There are real cases where one of these is the right call, not a temp line:
You are staying long-term
If you live in Lithuania, a real SIM from Telia or Tele2 is the only thing that fits banks, work, and daily life.
You only need data on a trip
A travel eSIM keeps you online while you move around, and a temp line covers any quick sign-up you hit along the way.
Free vs private vs burner: a quick look
Here is the short version so you can pick fast. Each column shows how the three options handle the things that matter.
↔ Scroll sideways to see every column
| What matters | Free shared | Private $1 | Burner SIM |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Price
what it costs you
|
Free | $1 | $10+ |
|
Privacy
who reads your SMS
|
Public | Only you | Registered |
|
Lifespan
how long it lasts
|
Minutes |
One session
long enough for the code
|
Months |
Prices and lifespan are rough guides and can shift by service and provider.
For most quick sign-ups, start with the shared option. If it fails, the private line covered above is the cheapest fix that just works.
A burner SIM only earns its cost when you truly need a phone number that lives in your hand for the long haul, unlike these temporary numbers.
Questions people ask
Short, honest answers to the things that come up most about these shared phone numbers.
› Does it really cost nothing?
› Do I need to give my own phone?
› Why is my code not arriving?
› Can I use it for WhatsApp or Telegram?
› Can others see my messages?
› How long does a shared line stay active?
› Is this legal?
› What is the difference between shared and paid?
› Will a shared line work for a bank?
› Do I need an app to read the SMS?
› Can I reuse the same number later?
Need a different country?
Not the fit you want? Pick a nearby country and read its codes the same easy way.
New to SMS verification?
See how the whole thing works, step by step, before you pick a line.