
July 8, 2026 · 6:08 AM
Savi put a fraud bouncer on the family phone line
Savi's new app screens texts, voicemails, and live calls for scams. Useful, but the bargain is blunt: to stop fake voices, it asks families to route real calls, messages, contacts, and suspicious screenshots through another AI system.
The scam detector works by becoming one more listener.
Savi launched its iOS and Android app on July 7 with a clean promise: protect families from AI-powered scams across calls and messages, then let one subscription cover everyone you worry about. 1 The less cute version is also the real one: the product fights fake voices, fake texts, and fake emergencies by asking the household to route real calls, messages, voicemails, screenshots, and family invites through Savi's own system.
That is not automatically bad. Imposter scams are not a thought experiment; the FTC said people reported losing $3.5 billion to them in 2025, nearly triple the reported amount in 2020. 2 But Savi is selling a very specific trade: let an AI security layer sit closer to your family's phone life than most relatives do.
Fast scan
| Question | What Savi says publicly |
|---|---|
| What launched? | A paid consumer app for iOS and Android that screens calls, messages, and digital communications for AI-powered scams and fraud. 3 |
| What are the main surfaces? | Text Message Protection, Voicemail Screening, Live Call Monitoring, Scamwise, and Proactive Call Screening marked as coming soon in Savi's launch post. 1 |
| What does it cost? | $7.99 per month, or $62.99 per year, with unlimited family members under one plan. 4 |
| Who can use the full feature set? | iPhone users get voicemail, text protection, On-Call, and Scamwise; Android users get voicemail, On-Call, and Scamwise because Savi says Android does not allow third-party SMS filtering in the same way. 5 |
| What is the catch? | Savi's privacy policy lists SMS and call content, sender information, metadata, voicemail transcripts, call recordings, user-submitted screenshots and emails, contacts if shared, and information about people who contact the user as data it may collect or receive. 6 |

The mechanics are less magical than the pitch
Savi is basically four products in a trench coat.
The first is voicemail interception. During setup, Savi says users activate call forwarding so unknown callers route to Savi Voicemail, where the system listens, transcribes, identifies the caller, and flags whether the message looks like scam, spam, or something worth returning. 5
The second is text filtering. On iPhone, Savi says it can automatically filter scam and spam SMS and iMessage traffic into junk folders before the user sees it; Android does not get that feature because of platform restrictions. 5 This is the least glamorous part and probably the most normal: it is email spam filtering dragged into the phone inbox.
The third is the spicy one: On-Call. Savi says users can add the app silently to a live call, where it listens for scam patterns and gives a real-time read on whether the caller seems legitimate. 4 That is the feature that makes the marketing work. It is also the feature that turns a phone call into a three-party situation, even if the third party is wearing a safety vest.
The fourth is Scamwise, the free checker where users can paste or upload suspicious websites, messages, phone numbers, screenshots, emails, or images and get a verdict. 5 TechCrunch reported that Savi used Scamwise as an early public test bed, with about 100,000 submissions by launch day, and that those submissions helped train Savi's scam-detection model. 7
The product story is clear enough. Scammers use cheap AI to make panic feel personal. Savi uses AI to slow the panic down before money moves. The roast is not that this is useless. The roast is that the solution to fake intimacy is a subscription layer that watches real intimacy.
The family plan is the growth loop
The clever part of Savi is not the $7.99 price. It is the family graph.
Savi calls the account owner a Guardian and the protected relatives Members; the Guardian manages billing, sends invites, and sees who has joined the account. 5 The company says the Guardian cannot see a family member's voicemail transcripts, audio, text messages, call logs, or contacts, only whether the person joined and set up protection. 5 Good. That line matters.
But the invite model still changes the product from "install this app" to "please persuade your parents, partner, kids, or close friends to install this app." Savi's terms say the user who sends a family invitation is the sender of that invitation and is responsible for having permission to send it. 8 That is a tidy bit of legal plumbing: the company gives you the family safety ladder, then hands you the liability sticker before you climb it.
This is where the product gets emotionally efficient. A single plan covers unlimited family members, and Savi offers guided setup and human onboarding. 4 The buyer is not only buying a scam filter. The buyer is buying the feeling of no longer being unpaid tech support for every weird text their family receives.
The data bargain is bigger than "we do not sell it"
Savi's pricing FAQ says user data is never sold or shared with third parties, and that anonymized submission data may be used to improve detection systems over time. 4 That is the reassuring sentence. The privacy policy is where the full machinery shows up.
The policy says Savi may collect or process contact data, account profile data, SMS and call data, voicemail transcripts, call recordings, payment-related data, screenshots, emails, other user-generated content, metadata, device data, online activity data, contacts if a user agrees to share them, and information about people who text, call, or leave voicemails routed through the service. 6 That is not a small collection bucket. It is the stuff scammers want because it is the stuff that makes a scam convincing.
Savi also says it may use personal information for research and development, including to train its AI, while its AI providers, such as Open Router, are prohibited from training their models on users' personal information. 6 Translation: the provider-training promise is useful, but it is not the same thing as saying your scam submissions never become product-learning material.
The terms go even broader. They say users grant Savi a transferable, perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide license to use their content for operating and providing the service, and they say the content may be used by Savi or third-party AI service providers to train, develop, improve, classify, moderate, and market the service. 8 That may be standard legal sprawl. It is still sprawl, and it sits under a product whose input data can include panic calls, family screenshots, voicemails, and other people's phone numbers.
The consent trap is not solved by good intentions
Live call monitoring is the feature Savi needs to be interesting. It is also the feature with the messiest social physics.
Savi's own terms warn that federal and state laws may require one-party or all-party consent before calls, voicemails, or SMS/MMS communications are monitored, intercepted, analyzed, or recorded. The same section says users are solely responsible for checking the law, getting any needed consent, and giving any required notice before using those features. 8
That is a harsh little handoff. The product pitch says, "When a call feels off, add Savi." The contract says, in effect, "also become your own wiretap compliance department." Most people under pressure from a fake kidnapping call are not going to run a consent checklist first. That does not make Savi uniquely evil. It makes the live-call feature exactly as awkward as it sounds.
Verdict
Savi is not a dumb wrapper. The launch has a real problem, a clear buyer, a reasonable family price, and enough mechanics to be more than a chatbot with a badge. But the bargain is blunt: to protect a household from synthetic voices and fake emergencies, Savi asks for a seat inside the real ones.
Use it like a smoke alarm for high-risk relatives, not like a privacy charm. The product's best case is catching the nightmare call before someone wires money. Its weird case is turning family safety into another data flywheel with a monthly receipt. Savi did not put armor on grandma's phone. It put a very polite bouncer on the line and asked everyone else in the room to be cool with it.
References
- 1Today We Launch Savi: Scam Protection for Every Family
- 2FTC Data Show People Reported Losing $3.5 Billion to Imposter Scams in 2025
- 3Savi Security Launches App to Protect Families from AI Scams and Fraud
- 4Savi Pricing — Scam Protection for Your Whole Family
- 5Frequently Asked Questions
- 6Privacy Policy
- 7Savi's app aims to protect consumers from realistic AI scams like kidnappers demanding ransom
- 8Savi Terms of Service
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