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Universal Post Code Data Base

The document provides an overview of global postcode systems, detailing which countries have or do not have a postcode system, along with lists of countries that require postal codes, use a single postal code, or do not require postal codes at all. It also discusses the longest postcodes in the world, the use of ISO 3166 Alpha 2 signs for addressing, and includes a summary of postcode lengths by country. The information is part of the Universal POST*CODE® DataBase as of September 2023.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
15 views

Universal Post Code Data Base

The document provides an overview of global postcode systems, detailing which countries have or do not have a postcode system, along with lists of countries that require postal codes, use a single postal code, or do not require postal codes at all. It also discusses the longest postcodes in the world, the use of ISO 3166 Alpha 2 signs for addressing, and includes a summary of postcode lengths by country. The information is part of the Universal POST*CODE® DataBase as of September 2023.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 12

Universal POST*CODE® DataBase page 1/11

Addressing Knowledge Centre

General Addressing Issues

1 Which countries in the world have/do not have a postcode system?

Nearly every country has a different addressing system.

Most countries have a postcode system which indicates the delivery zone or office. When a letter is sent
to a given country, it needs to be addressed correctly and with the postcode in the position required by
that country.

However, some countries do not have a postcode system or have one but do not use it.

Here you can find two lists: a list of countries with a postcode system and a list of countries without a
postcode system.

Universal DataBase (Sep. 2023)


List of countries which require postal codes:
Country/territory Country/territory Country/territory Country/territory Country/territory
name name name name name
A-C C-I I-M M-S S-Z

Afghanistan Cyprus Iran Mozambique San Marino


Äland Czech Republic Iraq Myanmar Saudi Arabia
Albania Denmark Ireland Namibia Senegal
Algeria Diego Garcia (IOT) Isle of Man Nauru Serbia
American Samoa Djibouti Israel Nepal Singapore
Andorra Dominican Republic Italy Netherlands Slovakia
Anguilla Ecuador Japan New Caledonia Slovenia
Argentina Egypt Jersey New Zealand South Africa
South Georgia and
Armenia El Salvador Jordan Nicaragua South Sandwich
Islands
Ascension Estonia Kazakhstan Niger Spain
Australia Eswatini Kenya Nigeria Sri Lanka
Austria Ethiopia Kiribati Niue Sudan
Falkland Island Svalbard and Jan
Azerbaijan Korea (Rep.) Norfolk Island
(Malvinas) Mayen
North Macedonia
Bahrain Faröe Islands Kosovo (UNMIK) Sweden
(Republic of)
Federated States of Northern Mariana
Bangladesh Kuwait Switzerland
Micronesia Islands
Barbados Finland Kyrgyzstan Norway Taiwan
Belarus France Laos Oman Tajikistan
Belgium French Guiana Latvia Pakistan Tanzania
French Southern
Bermuda Lebanon Palau Thailand
Territories
Bhutan Gabon Lesotho Palestine Timor-Leste
Bosnia and
Georgia Liberia Panama Trinidad and Tobago
Herzegovina
Brazil Germany Liechtenstein Papua New Guinea Tristan da Cunha
British Antarctic
Ghana Lithuania Paraguay Tunisia
Territory

Universal POST*CODE® DataBase page 1/11


British Indian Ocean
Gibraltar Luxembourg Peru Türkiye
Territory (IOT)
Brunei Darussalam Greece Macao Philippines Turkmenistan
Pitcairn, Henderson,
Turks and Caicos
Bulgaria Greenland Madagascar Ducie and Oeno
Islands
Islands
Cabo Verde Guadeloupe Malawi Poland Uganda
Cambodia Guam Malaysia Portugal Ukraine
Canada Guatemala Maldives Puerto Rico United Kingdom
Cayman Islands Guernsey Malta Réunion Uruguay
Chile Guinea Marshall Islands Rhode Island USA
China Guinea-Bissau Martinique Romania Uzbekistan
Christmas Island Haiti Mauritius Russian Federation Vatican City
Clipperton Island Hawaii Mayotte Saint Barthélemy Venezuela
Cocos (Keeling) Heard Island and
Mexico Saint Helena Viet Nam
Island McDonald Islands
Colombia Honduras Moldova Saint Kitts and Nevis Virgin Islands, British
Comoros Hong Kong Monaco Saint Lucia Virgin Islands, U.S.
Congo (Dem. Rep.) Hungary Mongolia Saint Martin (FRA) Wallis and Futuna
Saint Pierre and
Costa Rica Iceland Montenegro Western Sahara
Miquelon
Saint Vincent and
Croatia India Montserrat Zambia
Grenadines
Cuba Indonesia Morocco Samoa Zimbabwe

Universal DataBase (Sep. 2023)


List of countries which use a single postal code for the whole country:
Country/territory name Single Postcode Country/territory name Single Postcode
999077
Anguilla AI-2640 Hong Kong
(from CHN to HKG)
999078
Ascension ASCN 1ZZ Macao
(from CHN to MAC)
British Antarctic Territory BIQQ 1ZZ Nauru NRU68
British Indian Ocean Territory
BBND 1ZZ Niue 9974
(IOT)
Christmas Island 6798 Norfolk Island 2899
Pitcairn, Henderson, Ducie
Cocos (Keeling) Island 6799 PCRN 1ZZ
and Oeno Islands
Diego Garcia (IOT) BBND 1ZZ Saint Helena STHL 1ZZ
Falkland Island (Malvinas) F1QQ 1ZZ Samoa AS 96799
South Georgia and South
French Southern Territories 97408 SIQQ 1ZZ
Sandwich Islands
French Southern Territories
95724 Tristan da Cunha TDCU 1ZZ
(La Terre-Adélie)
French Southern Territories
97410 Turks and Caicos Islands TKCA 1ZZ
(Île Tromelin)
Gibraltar GX11 1AA Vatican City 00120
Heard Island and McDonald
7151
Islands

Universal POST*CODE® DataBase page 2/11


Universal DataBase (Sep. 2023)
List of countries which do not require postal codes:

Country/territory name Country/territory name Country/territory name Country/territory name

A-B C-G G-S S-Z


Angola Cameroon Guyana Solomon Islands
Antarctica Central African Rep. Jamaica Somalia
Antigua and Barbuda Chad Korea (Dem. Rep.) South Sudan
Aruba Comoros Libya (State of) Suriname
Ashmore and Cartier
Congo (Rep.) Mali Syria
Islands
Australian Antarctic
Cook Islands Mauritania Togo
Territory
Netherlands Antilles
(Bonaire,
Bahamas Côte d'Ivoire Saint Eustatius and Saba, Tokelau
Curaçao, Sint Maarten,
Aruba)
Belize Curaçao Qatar Tonga
Queen Maud Land and
Benin Dominica Tuvalu
Peter I Island
U.S. Minor Outtlying
Bolivia Equatorial Guinea Ross Dependency
Islands (UMI)
Bonaire, Saint Eustatius
Eritrea Rwanda United Arab Emirates
and Saba
Botswana Fiji Sao Tomé and Principe Vanuatu
Bouvet Island Gabon Seychelles Yemen
Burkina Faso Gambia Sierra Leone Zimbabwe
Burundi Grenada Sint Maarten (Dutch part)

2 What is the longest postcode in the world?

The longest postcodes in the world belong to Iran (Islamic Rep.) and the United States of America.

Postcodes in Iran consist of 10 digits below the locality name.

Click here to display the detailed description of the postcode and addressing system in Iran:
http://www.upu.int/fileadmin/documentsFiles/activities/addressingUnit/irnEn.pdf

In the United States of America, the ZIP+4 system defines postcodes as having five digits, a hyphen, and
four digits. In total, this gives nine digits plus a hyphen, which results in 10 characters that must be
reserved for U.S. postcodes on labels, in databases, etc.

Click here to display the detailed description of the postcode and addressing system in the U.S.:
http://www.upu.int/fileadmin/documentsFiles/activities/addressingUnit/usaEn.pdf

3 Do UPU documents contain any official statements, proposals or recommendations


regarding the use of ISO 3166 Alpha 2 signs for addressing (SI–1000 Ljubljana for Slovenia,
SK for Slovakia, FR for France, etc.)?

The issue of two-character ISO codes preceding postcodes can be quite confusing.

Universal POST*CODE® DataBase page 3/11


First of all, prefixing a postcode with a two-character ISO code is not – and has never been – an inter-
national standard. It is up to the administration of the country concerned to decide whether two-character
ISO codes should appear in the addresses or not.

Some countries dislike this practice because it disturbs their sorting routines, which is why they have
excluded ISO codes from their recommended address format.

However, countries from some regions (e.g. Scandinavia, Benelux, Baltic countries) still use them, which
is where the issue of ISO codes in addresses becomes complex. The use of ISO codes is not
discouraged by the UPU either.

However, since it is common practice not to use country codes, the UPU recommends using them only if
recommended by the country concerned. This recommendation was issued in International Bureau
circular 201 of 22 May 2006 (Amendment of the Letter Post Regulations).

(…) Administrations may recommend that, on items addressed to countries where the recommended
position of the postcode is in front of the name of the location of destination, the postcode should be
preceded by the EN ISO 3166–1 Alpha 2 country code followed by a hyphen. This shall in no way detract
from the requirement for the name of the destination country to be printed in full. (…)

Information about the correct addressing systems for each country is available on our website at:
http://www.upu.int/en/activities/addressing/postal-addressing-systems-in-member-countries.html

Below is a table indicating which countries use the ISO prefix.

Universal DataBase (Sep. 2023)


Countries using ISO codes as prefix:

Country/territory
name Country/territory name Country/territory name
A-G G-N P-V
Albania No Germany No Norway No
Andorra Yes Greece No Palestine No
Armenia No Hungary No Poland No
Austria No Iceland No Portugal No
Azerbaijan Yes Ireland No Romania No
Belarus No Italy No Russian Federation No
Belgium No Kazakhstan No San Marino No
Bosnia and
No Kiribati Yes Serbia No
Herzegovina
Bulgaria (Rep.) No Latvia Yes Slovakia No
Croatia Yes Liechtenstein No Slovenia Yes
Cyprus Yes Lithuania Yes Spain No
Czech Rep. No Luxembourg Yes Sweden Yes
Macedonia (the former Yugoslav
Denmark No No Switzerland No
Rep. of)
Djibouti No Malta No Timor-Leste (Dem. Rep.) Yes
Estonia No Moldova Yes Türkiye No
Finland Yes Monaco No Ukraine No
France No Netherlands No Great Britain No
Georgia No Nauru Yes Vatican No

Universal POST*CODE® DataBase page 4/11


4 Is there a table summarizing the length of postcodes by country? I am trying to determine
which countries have postcodes exceeding six characters in length.

Below is a list of postcode lengths by country. Please note that this list includes only countries which are
UPU members and which provide their data for inclusion in the Universal POST*CODE® DataBase.

Universal DataBase (Sep. 2023)


List of postcode lengths by country:
PC PC PC
Country/territory name Country/territory name Country/territory name
Lgth Lgth Lgth
A-G G-N N-Z
Afghanistan 4 Guinea-Bissau 4 Palau 5
Äland 8 Haiti 6 Palau 10
Åland Islands 5 Hawaii 5 Palestine 8
Albania 4 Hawaii 10 Palestine 4
Heard Island and
Algeria 5 4 Panama 4
McDonald Islands
American Samoa 5 Honduras 5 Papua New Guinea 3
American Samoa 10 Hong Kong 6 Paraguay 6
Andorra 5 Hungary 4 Peru 5
Anguilla 7 Iceland 3 Philippines 4
Argentina 8 India 6 Pitcairn 8
Armenia 4 Indonesia 5 Poland 6
Ascension 8 Iran 6 Portugal 8
Australia 4 Iran 11 Puerto Rico 5
Australia 9 Iraq 5 Puerto Rico 10
Austria 4 Ireland 7 Réunion 5
Azerbaijan 6 Isle of Man 7 Rhode Island 5
Bahrain 3 Israel 7 Rhode Island 10
Bahrain 4 Italy 5 Romania 6
Bangladesh 4 Japan 8 Russian Federation 6
S. Georgia and S.
Barbados 7 Jersey 7 8
Sandwich
Belarus 6 Jordan 5 Saint Barthélemy 5
Belgium 4 Kazakhstan 6 Saint Helena 8
Bermuda 4 Kazakhstan 7 Saint Kitts and Nevis 6
Bhutan 5 Kenya 5 Saint Lucia 8
Bosnia and Herzegovina 5 Kiribati 6 Saint Martin (FR) 5
Br. Indian Ocean Ter. 8 Korea (Rep.) 5 Saint Pierre and Miquelon 5
Brazil 9 Kosovo (UNMIK) 5 Samoa 6
British Antarctic Territory 8 Kuwait 5 San Marino 5
Brunei Darussalam 6 Kyrgyzstan 6 Saudi Arabia 5
Bulgaria 4 Laos 5 Saudi Arabia 8
Cabo Verde 4 Latvia 7 Saudi Arabia 10
Cambodia 6 Lebanon 4 Senegal 5
Canada 7 Lebanon 10 Serbia 5
Cayman Islands 8 Lesotho 3 Serbia 6
Chile 7 Liberia 4 Singapore 6
China 6 Liechtenstein 4 Slovakia 6

Universal POST*CODE® DataBase page 5/11


Christmas Island 4 Lithuania 8 Slovenia 4
Clipperton Island 5 Luxembourg 6 South Africa 4
Cocos (Keeling) Is. 4 Macao 6 Spain 5
Colombia 6 Madagascar 3 Sri Lanka 5
St. Vincent and
Comoros 8 Malawi 6 6
Grenadines
Congo (Dem. Rep.) 7 Malaysia 5 Sudan 5
Costa Rica 5 Maldives 5 Svalbard and Jan Mayen 4
Croatia 8 Malta 3 Sweden 6
Cuba 5 Malta 5 Sweden 9
Cyprus 7 Malta 8 Switzerland 4
Czech Republic 6 Marshall Islands 5 Taiwan 5
Denmark 4 Marshall Islands 10 Tajikistan 6
Diego Garcia 8 Martinique 5 Tanzania 5
Djibouti 5 Mauritius 5 Thailand 5
Dominican Republic 5 Mayotte 5 Timor-Leste (Dem. Rep.) 7
Ecuador 6 Mexico 5 Trinidad and Tobago 6
Egypt 5 Moldova 7 Tristan da Cunha 8
Egypt 7 Monaco 5 Tunisia 4
El Salvador 4 Mongolia 5 Türkiye 5
Estonia 5 Mongolia 10 Turkmenistan 6
Eswatini 4 Montenegro 5 Turks and Caicos Is. 8
Ethiopia 4 Montserrat 7 Uganda 5
Falkland Is. (Malvinas) 8 Morocco 5 Ukraine 5
Faröe Islands 6 Mozambique 4 United Kingdom 6
Federated States of
5 Myanmar 5 United Kingdom 7
Micronesia
Federated States of
10 Myanmar 7 United Kingdom 8
Micronesia
Finland 8 Namibia 5 United Kingdom 7
France 5 Nauru 5 United Kingdom 7
French Guiana 5 Nepal 5 United Kingdom 8
French Polynesia 5 Netherlands 4 Uruguay 5
Gabon 2 Netherlands 7 USA 10
Georgia 4 New Caledonia 5 USA 5
Germany 5 New Zealand 4 Uzbekistan 6
Ghana 11 Nicaragua 5 Vatican City 5
Ghana 6 Niger 4 Venezuela 4
Gibraltar 8 Nigeria 6 Viet Nam 5
Greece 6 Niue 4 Virgin Islands, British 6
Greenland 4 Norfolk Island 4 Virgin Islands, U.S. 5
Guadeloupe 5 North Macedonia (Rep.) 4 Virgin Islands, U.S. 10
Guam 5 Northern Mariana Islands 5 Wallis and Futuna 5
Guam 10 Northern Mariana Islands 10 Western Sahara 5
Guatemala 5 Norway 4 Zambia 5
Guernsey 7 Oman 3 Zimbabwe 5
Guinea 3 Pakistan 5

Universal POST*CODE® DataBase page 6/11


5 Is there a standard that a country should follow when it does not adopt a postcode?

No, there is no standard to follow. When a country implements a postcode, it should be kept as simple as
possible. This is not always possible, however, as, in their postal operations, countries have to attach
several elements to their coding method (ISO prefix, zone, regional distribution centre, delivery office,
etc.).

6 Is there a single unified addressing rule for Europe?

There is no single unified addressing rule for Europe. In Europe, there are a variety of addressing
systems as well as addressing rules, including usage of the ISO prefix. Therefore, addressing templates
for European countries should be created on a case by case basis (for each individual country).

7 Some cities have double postcodes, one from the country they belong to and another from
a neighbouring country. Which postcode is the right one?

The most common reason for assigning to a city the postcode of a neighbouring country is that the
nearest mail dispatch centre is located in the neighbouring country. Consequently, dispatching the mail
via the country in which the city is located would generate unnecessary mail traffic.

To avoid unnecessary mail circulation, Deutsche Post recommends that, for the city of Bünsingen, the
Swiss postcode (8238) should be used for all mail posted in Switzerland. For mail to Bünsingen posted in
Germany or other countries, the German postcode (78266) is recommended.

The same rule also applies for the following Austrian cities, to which both German and Austrian post-
codes have been assigned:

City name Country in which city is located Austrian postcode German postcode
Hirschegg Austria 6992 87568

Jungholz Austria 6691 87491

Mittelberg Austria 6993 87569

Riezlern Austria 6991 87567

The German postcodes should be used for mail to these cities dispatched in Germany, and the country
indicated should be "GERMANY", while the Austrian postcodes should be used for mail to these cities
dispatched from Austria and other countries, and the country indicated should be "AUSTRIA".

8 What are ISO country codes?

See ISO website at:


http://www.iso.org/iso/home/standards/country_codes.htm

ISO 3166 is the international standard for country codes. The purpose of ISO 3166 is to establish codes
for the representation of names of countries, territories or areas of geographical interest, and their
subdivisions.

There are three related documents, which, taken together, make up ISO 3166:
– ISO 3166–1: this is the country code. It contains a two-letter or a three-letter code and a numeric-3
code.
– ISO 3166–2: this is the country subdivision code. This code is based on the two-letter element
from ISO 3166–1, followed by a separator and a further string of up to three alphanumeric char-
acters.

Universal POST*CODE® DataBase page 7/11


– ISO 3166–3: this is the official country name. It contains four alphabetical characters.

ISO 3166–1 is currently the most widely used system of abbreviation for country names. We also use it
in our POST*CODE® DataBase to abbreviate country names. The short country names from ISO 3166–1
and the alpha-2 codes are made available by ISO at no charge for internal use and non-commercial
purposes and can be downloaded at:
http://www.iso.org/iso/home/standards/country_codes/iso-3166-1_decoding_table.htm

More detailed information is available on the ISO website at:


www.iso.org

9 Should ISO codes be applied in the mail address?

In most cases, and for the sake of simplicity, the common name of a country (and not the ISO one)
should be used in addresses on envelopes. In most cases, common names are better recognized or
simply easier to fit on the envelope than the official country name.

Examples:
– Venezuela (the common name) and not Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela (the ISO name);
– Bolivia (the common name) and not Plurinational State of Bolivia (the ISO name).

10 Is any information available as to which postcodes are numeric only and which postcodes
are alphanumeric? Are there any rules such as "anything over 5 is alphanumeric"?

No, there is no rule governing which postcodes are numeric and which are alphanumeric. The decision is
purely conventional and up to the country concerned.

The list below contains information about postcode type per country. If a country has a single postcode,
that postcode has been entered as a postcode type. There are some countries that have a numeric
postcode but with a special character (or whitespace or dash "–"), such as Brazil or Czech Rep. those
countries have been classified as Numeric (*).

Universal DataBase (Sep. 2023)


Postcode type per country:
Country/territory PCODE Country/territory PCODE
PCODE type PCODE type
name format name format
A-Le Li-Z

Afghanistan 9999 N Maldives 99999 N


Äland AX-99999 A/N Malta AAA A
Albania 9999 N Malta AA 99 A/N*
Algeria 99999 N Malta AAA 9999 A/N*
American Samoa 99999 N Marshall Islands 99999 N
American Samoa 99999-9999 N* Marshall Islands 99999-9999 N*
Andorra AD999 A/N Martinique 99999 N
Anguilla AA-9999 A/N Mauritius 99999 N
Argentina A9999AAA A/N Mayotte 99999 N
Armenia 9999 N Mexico 99999 N
Ascension AAAA 9AA A/N Moldova MD-9999 A/N
Australia 9999 N Monaco 99999 N
Australia XXX9999 A/N Mongolia 99999 N
Austria 9999 N Mongolia 99999-9999 A/N

Universal POST*CODE® DataBase page 8/11


Azerbaijan AZ9999 A/N Montenegro 99999 N
Bahrain 999 N Montserrat MSR9999 A/N
Bahrain 9999 N Morocco 99999 N
Bangladesh 9999 N Mozambique 9999 N
Barbados BB99999 A/N Myanmar 99999 N
Belarus 999999 N Myanmar 9999999 N
Belgium 9999 N Namibia 99999 N
Bermuda AA99 A/N Nauru AAA99 A/N
Bhutan 99999 N Nepal 99999 N
Bosnia and
99999 N Netherlands 9999 N
Herzegovina
Brazil 99999-999 A/N Netherlands 9999 AA A/N*
British Antarctic
AAAA 9AA A/N New Caledonia 99999 N
Territory
British Indian Ocean
AAAA 9AA A/N New Zealand 9999 N
Territory (IOT)
Brunei Darussalam AA9999 A/N Nicaragua 99999 N
Bulgaria 9999 N Niger 9999 N
Cabo Verde 9999 N Nigeria 999999 N
Cambodia 999999 N Niue 9999 N
Canada A9A 9A9 A/N Norfolk Island 9999 N
North Macedonia
Cayman Islands KY9-9999 A/N 9999 N
(Republic of)
Northern Mariana
Chile 9999999 N 99999 N
Islands
Northern Mariana
China 999999 N 99999-9999 N*
Islands
Christmas Island 9999 N Norway 9999 N
Clipperton Island 99999 N Oman 999 N
Cocos (Keeling)
9999 N Pakistan 99999 N
Island
Colombia 999999 N Palau 99999 N
Congo (Dem. Rep.) 9999999 N Palau 99999-9999 N*
Costa Rica 99999 N Palestine P9999999 A/N
Croatia HR-99999 A/N Palestine A/N
P999
Cuba 99999 N Panama 9999 N
Cyprus CY-9999 A/N Papua New Guinea 999 N
Czech Republic 999 99 N* Paraguay 999999 N
Denmark 9999 N Peru 99999 N
Diego Garcia (IOT) AAAA 9AA A/N Philippines 9999 N
Pitcairn, Henderson,
Djibouti 99999 N Ducie and Oeno AAAA 9AA A/N
Islands
Dominican Republic 99999 N Poland 99-999 N*
Ecuador 999999 N Portugal 9999-999 N*
Egypt 99999 N Puerto Rico 99999 N
Egypt 9999999 N Puerto Rico 99999-9999 N*
El Salvador 9999 N Réunion 99999 N
Estonia 99999 N Rhode Island 99999 N
Eswatini A999 A/N Rhode Island 99999-9999 N*
Ethiopia 9999 N Romania 999999 N
Falkland Island
A9AA 9AA A/N Russian Federation 999999 N
(Malvinas)
Faröe Islands FO-999 A/N Saint Barthélemy 99999 N

Universal POST*CODE® DataBase page 9/11


Federated States of
99999 N Saint Helena AAAA 9AA A/N
Micronesia
Federated States of
99999-9999 N* Saint Kitts and Nevis KN9999 A/N
Micronesia
Finland FI-99999 A/N Saint Lucia LC999-999 A/N
France 99999 N Saint Martin (FRA) 99999 N
Saint Pierre and
French Guiana 99999 N 99999 N
Miquelon
French Southern Saint Vincent and
99999 N VC9999 A/N
Territories Grenadines
Gabon 99 N Samoa WS9999 A/N
Georgia 9999 N San Marino § N
Germany 99999 N Saudi Arabia AAAA9999 A/N
Ghana AA-999-9999 A/N Saudi Arabia 99999 N
Ghana A/N Saudi Arabia 99999-9999 N*
AA-999
Gibraltar AA99 9AA A/N Senegal 99999 N
Greece 999 99 N* Serbia 999999 N
Greenland 9999 N Serbia 99999 N
Guadeloupe 99999 N Singapore 999999 N
Guam 99999 N Slovakia 999 99 N*
Guam 99999-9999 N* Slovenia 9999 N
Guatemala 99999 N South Africa 9999 N
South Georgia and
Guernsey AAA 9AA A/N South Sandwich AAAA 9AA A/N
Islands
Guinea 999 N Spain 99999 N
Guinea-Bissau 9999 N Sri Lanka 99999 N
Haiti HT9999 A/N Sudan 99999 N
Svalbard and Jan
Hawaii 99999 N 9999 N
Mayen
Hawaii 99999-9999 N* Sweden 999999 N
Heard Island and
9999 N Sweden SE-999 99 A/N*
McDonald Islands
Honduras 99999 N Switzerland 9999 N
Hong Kong 999999 N Taiwan 99999 N
Hungary 9999 N Taiwan 99999 N
Iceland 999 N Tajikistan 999999 N
India 999999 N Tanzania 99999 N
Indonesia 99999 N Thailand 99999 N
Iran 999999 N Timor-Leste TL99999 A/N
Iran 999999-9999 N* Trinidad and Tobago 999999 N
Iraq 99999 N Tristan da Cunha AAAA 9AA A/N
Ireland XXX XXXX A/N* Tunisia 9999 N
Isle of Man AAA 9AA A/N Türkiye 99999 N
Israel 9999999 N Turkmenistan 999999 N
Turks and Caicos
Italy 99999 N AAAA 9AA A/N
Islands
Japan 999-9999 N* Uganda 99999 N
Jersey AAA 9AA A/N Ukraine 99999 N
Jordan 99999 N United Kingdom A9 9AA A/N*
Kazakhstan 999999 N United Kingdom A99 9AA A/N*
Kazakhstan A99A9A9 A/N United Kingdom A9A 9AA A/N*
Kenya 99999 N United Kingdom AA9A 9AA A/N*

Universal POST*CODE® DataBase page 10/11


Kiribati AA9999 A/N United Kingdom AA99 9AA A/N*
Korea (Rep.) 99999 N United Kingdom AA9A 9AA A/N*
Kosovo (UNMIK) 99999 N Uruguay 99999 N
Kuwait 99999 N USA 99999 N
Kyrgyzstan 999999 N USA 99999-9999 N*
Laos 99999 N Uzbekistan 999999 N
Latvia LV-9999 A/N Vatican City 99999 N
Lebanon 9999 N Venezuela 9999 N
Lebanon 99 999 999 N* Venezuela 9999-A A/N
Lesotho 999 N Viet Nam 99999 N
Liberia 9999 N Virgin Islands, British VG9999 A/N
Liechtenstein 9999 N Virgin Islands, U.S. 99999 N
Lithuania LT-99999 A/N Virgin Islands, U.S. 99999-9999 N*
Luxembourg L-9999 A/N Wallis and Futuna 99999 N
Macao 999999 N Western Sahara 99999 N
Madagascar 999 N Zambia 99999 N
Malawi 999999 N Zimbabwe 99999 N
Malaysia 99999 N

numeric = N
alphanumeric = A/N
numeric with a
N*
special character =

Universal POST*CODE® DataBase page 11/11

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