Receptivity to freestream disturbances is the initial stage of the boundary-layer transition process, which can determine the final path of boundary-layer disturbance triggering transition. At present, there is relatively sufficient research on the receptivity of two-dimensional boundary layers to zero incident angle disturbances. In fact, the freestream disturbances often propagate into the boundary layer in the form of non-zero incident angle, resulting in a component of spatial disturbance in the circumferential direction of rotating body (such as a cone). It is a receptivity problem with distinct three-dimensional features. However, there is relatively little research on this three-dimensional receptivity issue. The preliminary work only studied the three-dimensional receptivity to low-frequency incident slow acoustic waves. There has not been a systematic study on the three-dimensional receptivity to different types of freestream disturbances. The three-dimensional receptivity of a blunt cone to different freestream disturbances is studied in this work. Firstly, a high-resolution numerical simulation method is used to investigate the three-dimensional receptivity process by introducing freestream disturbances with an incident angle of 15°. The freestream disturbances include fast acoustic wave, slow acoustic wave, entropy wave, and vortex wave. Their frequencies are chosen as dimensionless 1.1 and 5, corresponding to the first mode frequency and the second mode frequency, respectively. Then, the phase velocity and shape function of the boundary-layer disturbances at each position of circumference for the numerical results are obtained by Fourier transform. To explain the receptivity mechanisms, the corresponding results by linear stability analysis are obtained for comparisons. The results are shown below. The first mode and the second mode of the boundary layer can be effectively excited by the incident slow acoustic waves; it is difficult for the incident fast acoustic waves to excite unstable modes in the boundary layer; the incident entropy wave and vortex wave are difficult to excite the first mode at low frequency, but can excite the second mode at high frequency. Furthermore, the incident angle of the freestream disturbances can lead to the differences in the receptivity at different circumferential positions of the cone, which can be reflected in two ways. One is the difference in the dominant disturbance form at different circumferential positions, and the other is the difference in the amplitude of boundary-layer disturbances. Under different disturbance types and frequencies, these differences between different circumferential positions exhibit different results. The strongest receptivity may occur on the incident front, the incident back, and the incident side. These phenomena may result from the combined action of the upstream head disturbance and the disturbance on the incident front.