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promoted the use of ZIP codes for the USPS during the 1960s and 1970s.The
ZIP code is the system of postal codes used by the United States Postal Service (USPS). The letters
ZIP, an
acronym for
Zone Improvement Plan, "ZIP Code," from International Paper Knowledge Center glossary are written properly in capital letters and were chosen to suggest that the
mail travels more efficiently, and therefore more quickly, when senders use it. The basic format consists of five numerical digits. An extended
ZIP + 4 code includes the five digits of the ZIP code, a hyphen and then four more digits, which allow a piece of
mail to be directed to a more precise location than by the ZIP code alone.
ZIP Code was originally registered as a
trademark by the U.S. Postal Service but its registration has since expired. Trademark status information, from
United States Patent and Trademark Office
Background
The postal service implemented
postal zones for large cities in 1943. For example:
Mr. John Smith
3256 Epiphenomenal Avenue
Minneapolis
16, Minnesota
Wikimedia Foundation Inc.
200 2nd Ave. South #358
St. Petersburg
1, Florida
The "16" in the first example and "1" in the second is the number of the
postal zone within the city.
By the early
1960s a more general system was needed, and on July 1, 1963, non-mandatory ZIP codes were announced for the whole country. Robert Moon (postal inspector), an employee of the post office, is considered the father of the ZIP code. He submitted his proposal in 1944 while working as a postal inspector.
The post office only gives credit to Moon for the first three digits of the ZIP code, which describe the region of the country. In most cases, the last two digits coincide with the older postal zone number, thus:
Mr. John Smith
3256 Epiphenomenal Avenue
Minneapolis, Minnesota 554
16
Wikimedia Foundation Inc.
200 2nd Ave. South #358
St. Petersburg, Florida 337
01
In 1967, these were made mandatory for second- and third-class
bulk mailers, and the system was soon adopted generally. The United States Post Office used a
cartoon character,
Mr. ZIP, to promote use of the ZIP code. He was often depicted with a legend such as "USE ZIP CODES" in the
selvage of panes of Postage stamps or on labels contained in, or the covers of, booklet panes of stamps. Curiously enough, the only time the Postal Service issued a stamp promoting the ZIP code, in 1974, Mr. ZIP was not depicted.
ZIP + 4
In
1983, the U.S. Postal Service began using an expanded ZIP code system called "ZIP + 4", often called "plus-four codes" or "add-on codes."
Wikimedia Foundation Inc.
200 2nd Ave. South #358
St. Petersburg, FL 33701-4313
Furthermore, recently the Postal Service started a "Find a ZIP Code" feature on its website, which provides an address format that is most compatible with its optical character recognition, or OCR, scanners:
WIKIMEDIA FOUNDATION INC
200 2ND AVE S # 358
SAINT PETERSBURG FL 33701-4313
A ZIP + 4 code uses the basic five-digit code plus an additional four digits to identify a geographic segment within the five-digit delivery area, such as a city block, a group of apartments, an individual high-volume receiver of mail or any other unit that could use an extra identifier to aid in efficient mail sorting and delivery. Use of the plus-four code is not required except for certain presorted mailings. In general, mail is read by a Multiline Optical Character Reader (MLOCR) that instantly determines the correct ZIP + 4 code from the address and — along with the even more specific
delivery point — sprays a POSTNET barcode on the face of the mailpiece that corresponds to 11 digits. This technology has greatly increased the speed and accuracy of mail delivery and, in turn, kept costs nearly constant for over a decade.
For Post office boxes, the general (but not invariable) rule is that each box has its own ZIP + 4 code. The add-on code is often one of the following: the last four digits of the box number (e.g., PO Box 58001, Washington DC 20037-8001), zero plus the last three digits of the box number (e.g., PO Box 12344, Chicago IL 60612-0344), or, if the box number consists of fewer than four digits, enough zeros added to the front of the box number to make it a four-digit number (e.g., PO Box 52, Garrett Park MD 20896-0052). However, there is no uniform rule, so the ZIP + 4 code must be looked up individually for each box.
It is common to use add-on code 9998 for mail addressed to the postmaster (to which requests for pictorial cancellations are usually addressed), 9999 for poste restante and other high-numbered add-on codes for
freepost. For a unique ZIP code (explained below), the add-on code is typically 0001.
Experiment selling the +4 addresses
In August
2007 the Post Office began an experimental program selling the four number extension to businesses. The first company to do this was
Saks Fifth Avenue which has gotten a zip code of 10022-SHOE code for the fourth floor shoe department in its flagship Fifth Avenue (Manhattan) store. Shoe Store In New York Opens With New Zip Code - CBS2.com - August 17, 2007
Postal bar code
The ZIP code is often translated into a barcode called
POSTNET that is printed on the mailpiece to make it easier for automated machines to sort. Unlike most barcode symbologies, Postnet uses long and short bars, not thin and thick bars. The barcode can be printed by the person who sends the mail (some word-processing programs such as
Word Perfect and
Microsoft Word include the feature), or the post office will put one on when it processes the piece. The post office generally uses Optical character recognition technology, though a human may have to read the address if absolutely necessary. (The automated machinery has the unfortunate tendency to paste the coding over the bottom half-inch of
postcards, often obliterating the signature; postcard printers have begun blocking a section off where the barcode will go to compensate.)
People who send
bulk mail can get a
discount on
postage if they have pre-printed the barcode themselves. This requires more than just a simple
typeface; mailing lists must be standardized with up-to-date CASS certified software that adds/verifies a full, correct ZIP + 4 code and an additional two Numerical digits representing the exact delivery point. Furthermore, mail must be presorted in a specific scheme and be accompanied by documentation verifying this. These steps are usually done with PAVE-certified software that also prints the barcoded address labels and barcoded sack or tray tags.
This means that every single mailable point in the country has its own 12-digit number (at least in theory). The delivery-point digits (the 10th and 11th digits) are calculated based on the primary or secondary number of the address. The USPS publishes the rules for calculating the delivery point in a document called the CASS Technical Guide. The last digit is
always a check digit, which is obtained by summing all 5, 9 or 11 digits, taking the Modulo base 10 of this sum (i.e. the remainder after dividing by 10) and finally subtracting this from 10. (Thus, the check digit for 10001-0001 00 would be 7, since 1+1+1=3, 3%10=3 and 10-3=7.) An application needs only to print something like /100010001007/ in the 12-Point (typography) Postnet font to create a valid barcode. The slashes "/" are translated into start/stop characters (one long bar), and each digit is translated into a sequence of
two-out-of-five code.
On business-reply mail, the
Facing Identification Mark code primarily indicates the orientation (facing) of the mailpiece, since there is generally not a
postage stamp or postage meter imprint containing fluorescent ink (which is usually used by the facing machine to orient mail.) Additionally, FIM codes A and C indicate that a Postnet bar code is present, allowing this mail to bypass the
Multiline Optical Character Reader and go straight to a barcode scanning machine. For that reason, even though
courtesy reply mail and metered reply mail are mailed with a stamp or a postage-meter imprint, they typically carry a FIM code, namely FIM A, to indicate that the Postnet bar code is present. The FIM D barcode is used for computer-generated indicia from online postage meters.
Structure and allocation
By geography
ZIP codes are numbered with the first digit representing a certain group of
U.S. states, the second and third digits together representing a region in that group (or perhaps a large city) and the fourth and fifth digits representing a group of delivery addresses within that region. The main town in a region (if applicable) often gets the first ZIP codes for that region; afterward, the numerical order often follows the alphabetical order.
Generally, the first three digits designate a
sectional center facility (SCF), the mail-sorting and -distribution center for an area. A sectional center facility may have more than one three-digit code assigned to it. For example, the Northern Virginia sectional center facility in Merrifield is assigned codes 220, 221, 222 and 223. In some cases, a sectional center facility may serve an area in an adjacent state, usually due to the lack of an appropriate location for a center in that region. For example, 739 in Oklahoma is assigned to
Liberal, Kansas; 865 in Arizona is assigned to
Gallup, New Mexico; and 961 in California to
Reno, Nevada.
Geographically, many of the lowest ZIP codes are in the
New England (U.S.) region, since these begin with '0'. Also in the '0' region are Puerto Rico, the US Virgin Islands and
APO/FPO military addresses for personnel stationed in
Europe. The lowest ZIP code is in
Holtsville, New York (00501, a ZIP Code exclusively for the U.S. Internal Revenue Service center there). Other low ZIP codes are 00601 for
Adjuntas, Puerto Rico; 01001 for
Agawam, Massachusetts, and 01002 for Amherst, Massachusetts. Up until 2001 there were also six zip codes even lower than 00501 that were numbered from 00210 to 00215 (located in
Portsmouth, New Hampshire) and were used by the Diversity Immigrant Visa program to receive applications from non-US citizens.
The numbers increase southward along the East Coast, such as 02115 (
Boston, Massachusetts), 10001 (New York City), 19103 (Philadelphia), 20008 (
Washington, D.C.), 30303 (Atlanta, Georgia) and 33130 (Miami, Florida) (these are only examples as each of these cities contain several zip codes in the same range). From there, the numbers increase heading westward and northward. For example, 40202 is in
Louisville, Kentucky, 50309 in
Des Moines, Iowa, 60601 in Chicago, 77063 in
Houston, 80202 in
Denver, Colorado, 94111 in San Francisco, California, 98101 in Seattle, Washington, and 99950 in
Ketchikan, Alaska.
The first digit of the ZIP code is allocated as follows:
- 0 = Connecticut (CT), Massachusetts (MA), Maine (ME), New Hampshire (NH), New Jersey (NJ), Puerto Rico (PR), Rhode Island (RI), Vermont (VT), Virgin Islands (VI), APO Europe (AE), FPO Europe (AE)
- 1 = Delaware (DE), New York (NY), Pennsylvania (PA)
- 2 = District of Columbia (DC), Maryland (MD), North Carolina (NC), South Carolina (SC), Virginia (VA), West Virginia (WV)
- 3 = Alabama (AL), Florida (FL), Georgia (GA), Mississippi (MS), Tennessee (TN), APO Americas (AA), FPO Americas (AA)
- 4 = Indiana (IN), Kentucky (KY), Michigan (MI), Ohio (OH)
- 5 = Iowa (IA), Minnesota (MN), Montana (MT), North Dakota (ND), South Dakota (SD), Wisconsin (WI)
- 6 = Illinois (IL), Kansas (KS), Missouri (MO), Nebraska (NE)
- 7 = Arkansas (AR), Louisiana (LA), Oklahoma (OK), Texas (TX)
- 8 = Arizona (AZ), Colorado (CO), Idaho (ID), New Mexico (NM), Nevada (NV), Utah (UT), Wyoming (WY)
- 9 = Alaska (AK), American Samoa (AS), California (CA), Guam (GU), Hawaii (HI), Marshall Islands (MH), Federated States of Micronesia (FM), Northern Mariana Islands (MP), Oregon (OR), Palau (PW), Washington (WA), APO Pacific (AP), FPO Pacific (AP)
The next two digits represent the sectional center facility (e.g. 432xx = Columbus OH), and the fourth and fifth digits represents the area of the city (if in a metropolitan area), or a village/town (outside metro areas): 43209 (4=Ohio,32=Columbus,09=Bexley). When a sectional center facility's area crosses state lines, that facility is assigned separate three-digit prefixes for the states that it serves; thus, it is possible to identify the state associated with any ZIP Code just by looking at the first three digits.
Despite the geographic derivation of most ZIP codes, the codes themselves do not represent geographic regions; they generally correspond to address groups or delivery routes. Consequently, ZIP Code "areas" can overlap, be subsets of each other, or be artificial constructs with no geographic area. Similarly, in areas without regular postal routes (rural route areas) or no mail delivery (undeveloped areas), ZIP Codes are not assigned or are based on sparse delivery routes, and hence the boundary between ZIP code areas is undefined.
For example, U.S. government agencies in and around the nation's capital are assigned ZIP codes starting with 20200 to 20599, which are Washington, D.C., ZIP codes, even if they are not located in Washington itself. While the
White House itself is located in ZIP code 20006, it has the ZIP code 20500. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is located in
Rockville, Maryland, at ZIP code 20852, but has been assigned by the Postal Service the address "Washington, DC 20555". The
United States Patent and Trademark Office used to be located in Crystal City, Virginia at ZIP Code 22202 but was assigned by the Postal Service the address "Washington, DC 20231"; however, since its move to Alexandria, Virginia, it uses the ZIP + 4 code 22313-1450.
Rarely, a locality is assigned a ZIP code that does not match the rest of the state. This is when the locality is so isolated that it is served from a sectional center in another state. For example, Fishers Island, New York, bears the ZIP code 06390 and is served from Connecticut — all other New York ZIP codes (excepting those at Holtsville for the Internal Revenue Service) begin with "1". Similarly, some Texas ZIP codes are served from New Mexico and thus bear codes beginning with "8" rather than "7". Returned government parcels from the District of Columbia are sent to ZIP codes beginning with "569", so that returned parcels are security checked at a remote facility (this was put into place after the
2001 anthrax attacks).
ZIP codes only loosely tied to cities
An address's ZIP code and the "city" name written on the same line do not necessarily mean that that address is within that city. The Postal Service designates a
single "default" place name for each ZIP code. This may be an actual incorporated town or city, a subentity of a town or city or an unincorporated census-designated place. Additional place names, also of any of these types, may be recognized as "acceptable" for a certain ZIP code. Still others are deemed "not acceptable", and if used may result in a delay in mail delivery.
Default place names are typically the actual city or town that the address is located in. However, for many cities that have incorporated since ZIP codes were introduced the actual city name is only "acceptable" and not the "default" place name. Many databases automatically assign the "default" place name for a ZIP code, without regard to any "acceptable" place names. For example,
Centennial, Colorado is divided among seven ZIP codes assigned to "
Aurora, Colorado", "
Englewood, Colorado" or "
Littleton, Colorado" as its "default" place names. Thus, from the perspective of the U.S. Postal Service, the city of Centennial and its 100,000 residents do not exist - they are part of Aurora, Englewood or Littleton. In the ZIP-code directory, Centennial addresses are listed under those three cities. And since it is "acceptable" to write "Centennial" in conjunction with any of the seven ZIP codes, one can write "Centennial" in an address that is actually in Aurora, Englewood, or Littleton, as long as it is in one of the shared ZIP Codes.
"Acceptable" place names are often added to a ZIP code in cases where the ZIP-code boundaries divide them between two or more cities, as in the case of Centennial. However, in many cases only the "default" name can be used, even when many addresses in the ZIP code are in another city. For example, approximately 85% of the area served by the ZIP code 85254, to which the place name "
Scottsdale, Arizona," is assigned, is actually inside the city limits of neighboring Phoenix, Arizona. This is because the post office that serves this area is in Scottsdale. This has led some residents of the ZIP code to believe that they live in Scottsdale when they actually live in Phoenix. A Scottsdale website listing the positive and negative aspects of the city mentioned the 85254 ZIP code as a positive aspect because "Scottsdale" is being used for businesses located outside the Scottsdale city limits.
This phenomenon is repeated across the country. The previously mentioned Englewood is a land-locked, inner-ring suburb that was built out by the 1960s. Its post office served the area that is now the high-growth southern tier of the
Denver-Aurora Metropolitan Area, and ZIP codes in this area were assigned "Englewood" as their "default" place name. An employment center as large as downtown Denver has grown in this area, and its office parks are the headquarters for many internationally recognized corporations. Even though they are actually located in other cities, they indicate "Englewood" as their location, as this is the "default" postal place name. As a result, there are really two "Englewoods" — the actual city, small and with a largely working-class residential population, and, a number of miles away, the postal "Englewood," a vast suburban area of upscale subdivisions and office parks that have nothing to do with the City of Englewood yet share a split identity with it solely because of ZIP codes. People who say that they live or work in "Englewood" and identify closely with it may rarely enter the actual city of that name. In Indiana the zip code for a town usually indicates the zip code for its corresponding township as nearly all of Indiana's small town post offices have rural routes.
"Acceptable place names" also come into play in areas of the country where many citizens identify more strongly with a particular urban center than the municipality they actually live in. For example,
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania has 130 distinct municipalities, but many of the county's residents, and even some residents of adjacent counties, commonly use "Pittsburgh, PA" as their postal address. The same thing applies in many cities that have more than one zip code, like Evansville, Indiana or Jacksonville, Florida.
Finally, many ZIP codes are for villages, census-designated places, portions of cities, or other entities that are not municipalities. For example, ZIP code 03750 is for
Etna, New Hampshire, but Etna is not a city or town; it is actually a
Village (United States)#new Hampshire in the town of Hanover, New Hampshire, which itself is assigned the ZIP code 03755. Another example is ZIP code 08043, which corresponds to the census-designated place of
Kirkwood, NJ but actually serves the entirety of Voorhees Township, NJ. This is also the case in
LaGrange, New York, a portion of which is served by the 12603 ZIP code based in the neighboring Poughkeepsie (town), New York. The rest of LaGrange is served by the LaGrangeville Post Office. LaGrangeville is itself, not a town at all, but a section of LaGrange. Another example is Armstrong Township of Vanderburgh County, Indiana. While the rest of the county uses the 477 prefix, Armstrong Township, despite having no incorporated town, uses the zip code 47617 and addresses itself "Armstrong, Indiana".
The postal designations for place names become
de facto locations for their addresses, and as a result it is difficult to convince residents and businesses that they actually are located in another city or town different from the "default" place name associated with their ZIP codes. Because of the confusion and lack of identity generated by this situation, some cities, such as Signal Hill, California, have successfully petitioned the Postal Service to change ZIP-code boundaries or create new ZIP codes so that their cities can be the "default" place name for addresses within the ZIP code.
This confusion also can have financial implications for local governments, because mail volume is among the factors used by the U.S. Census Bureau to estimate population changes between decennial census enumerations. Sometimes local officials in a community that is not the "default" place name for a zip code but is an "acceptable" place name will advise residents to always use the name of the community, because if the census estimate of that town's population is low they will get fewer State and Federal funds that are computed based on population.
Division and reallocation of ZIP codes
Like
area codes, ZIP codes are sometimes divided and changed, especially when a rural area becomes
suburban. Typically, the new codes become effective once announced, and a grace period (e.g., one year) is provided in which the new and old codes are used concurrently so that postal patrons in the affected area can notify correspondents, order new stationery, etc.Sam Roberts, "An Elite ZIP Code Becomes Harder to Crack,"
The New York Times, March 212007, page C15
Most significantly, in rapidly developing suburbs it is sometimes necessary to open a new sectional center facility, which must then be allocated its own three-digit ZIP-code prefix or prefixes. Such allocation can be done in various ways. For example, when a new sectional center facility was opened at
Dulles Airport in Virginia, the prefix 201 was allocated to that facility; therefore, for all post offices to be served by that sectional center facility the ZIP code changed from an old code beginning with 220 or 221 to a new code or codes beginning with 201. However, when a new sectional center facility was opened to serve
Montgomery County, Maryland, no new prefix was assigned. Instead, ZIP codes in the 207 and 208 ranges, which had previously been assigned alphabetically, were reshuffled so that 207xx ZIP codes in the county were changed to 208xx codes, while 208xx codes outside that county were changed to 207xx codes. Because Silver Spring, Maryland (whose postal area includes
Wheaton, Maryland) has its own prefix, 209, there was no need to apply the reshuffling to Silver Spring; instead, all mail going to 209xx ZIP codes was simply rerouted to the new sectional center facility.
ZIP codes also change when postal boundaries are realigned. For example, at the same time at which the above-noted change in Montgomery County took place, and under pressure from then-D.C. Mayor Marion Barry, the USPS realigned the postal boundaries between the District of Columbia and Maryland to match the actual boundary. Previously, many inner suburbs, such as
Bethesda, Maryland and
Takoma Park, Maryland, had been in the Washington, D.C., postal area. As a result of the change, ZIP codes in Maryland beginning with 200 were changed to new ZIP codes beginning with 207, 208 or 209, depending on their location, and ZIP codes straddling the D.C.-Maryland line were split. For example, 20014 (Bethesda) became 20814, while the Maryland portion of 20012 (Takoma Park) became 20912.
By type/use
There are four types of ZIP codes: Unique (assigned to a single high-volume address), P.O.-box-only (used only for P.O. boxes at a given facility, not for any other type of delivery), Military (used to route mail for the U.S. military) and Standard (all other ZIP codes). As examples of Unique ZIP codes, certain governmental agencies, universities, businesses or buildings that receive extremely high volumes of
mail have their own ZIP codes, such as 81009 for the Federal Citizen Information Center of the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) FCIC – About US in
Pueblo, Colorado; 30385 for
BellSouth in Atlanta; 21412 for Bancroft Hall, the midshipman dormitory at the United States Naval Academy; and 12345 for General Electric in
Schenectady, New York.An example of a P.O.-box-only ZIP code is 22313, which is used for P.O. boxes at the main post office in
Alexandria, Virginia. In the area surrounding that post office, home and business mail delivery addresses use ZIP code 22314, which is thus a Standard ZIP code.
The above will be made clearer by examining the allocation of ZIP codes in Princeton, New Jersey:
- 08540 - standard (deliveries in most of the Princeton postal area)
- 08541 - unique (Educational Testing Service)
- 08542 - standard (deliveries in the central area of the borough of Princeton, and also some PO boxes)
- 08543 - PO box only (PO boxes at the main post office)
- 08544 - unique (Princeton University)
Non-Standard Examples
While ZIP codes classified as Unique by the USPS always serve a single address, it should not be assumed that a zip code is Unique simply because it serves a single building, complex, or address. Large facilities are often given P.O.-box-only or Standard ZIP codes rather than Unique ZIP codes, because USPS carriers must distribute the mail to multiple boxes, offices, or buildings within the facility. In a Unique ZIP code, mail distribution within the single address is handled internally, rather than by USPS employees.
A few ZIP codes fall outside the three types. Military mail and Military mail ZIP codes are codes in use for Armed Forces of the United States members and their dependents overseas. The state postal abbreviations AP (Area Pacific), AA (Area Americas) and AE (Area Europe) were created in 1991 to serve these communities; previously, APO and FPO mail was addressed to APO San Francisco, APO Miami and APO New York City respectively, and APO/FPO ZIP codes were numerically close to the allocations for those cities. The creation of these new state codes necessitated the rewrite of thousands of pieces of postal software and still occasionally causes confusion, as the actual numeric ZIP codes used by the APO/FPO system did not change and are still in use.
New York City, NY is an extreme example. It is composed of five Counties that are also Boroughs within the city. They each have one or more SCF Codes.
*Brooklyn, New York:
112
*Bronx, New York:
104
*New York, New York (Manhattan):
:
100 (Standard);
:
101 (P.O. Boxes and Unique);
:
102 (P.O. Boxes and Unique).
*Queens:
:
110 (Floral Park);
:
111(Long Island City);
:
113 (Flushing);
:
114 (Jamaica);
:
116 (Far Rockaway)
*Staten Island:
103
:In the case of the first four Boroughs, the official and “accepted” names are the same, while—in the case of Queens—the Borough name is NOT accepted as an address, the SCF name is. In addition, the numerous “Accepted” names are official as well.
:In the case of
SCF 110 (Floral Park), it serves both eastern Jamaica, eastern Flushing, and northwestern
Nassau County, New York as well.
Other uses
Delivery services
Delivery services other than the USPS, such as
FedEx, United Parcel Service and DHL require a ZIP code for optimal internal routing of a package. This spares customers from being required to use some other routing designator, such as the
IATA airport code of the destination airport or railhead.
Statistics
ZIP codes are used not only for tracking of mail but in gathering geographical statistics in the United States. The United States Census Bureau has data that include the
latitude and longitude of the center-point of some ZIP codes (called ZIP Code Tabulation Areas or ZCTAs). The Census Bureau does not keep up-to-date datasets of all ZIP codes. Complete datasets are commercially available.
Marketing
The data are often used in
direct mail campaigns in a process called ZIP Code marketing, developed by
Martin Baier. Point of Sale cashiers sometimes ask consumers their home ZIP code. Besides providing purchasing-pattern data useful in determining the location of new business establishments, retailers can use directories to correlate this ZIP code with the name on a credit card to obtain a consumer's full address and telephone number. ZIP-coded data are also used in analyzing geographic factors in risk, an
insurance-industry and banking practice
pejoratively known as redlining. This can cause problems (e.g. expensive insurance) for people living near a town with a high crime rate and sharing its ZIP code, while they themselves actually live in a relatively crime free town (e.g. south west part of 94303).
Internet
ZIP code data is an integral part of dealer/store
locator software on many
web sites, especially bricks and clicks websites. This software processes a user-input ZIP code and returns a list of store or business locations, usually in order of increasing distance from the input ZIP code.
Pop culture
- Santa Claus gets so much mail form children that the U.S. Postal Service capitalized on the name in the 50's by using the post office in Santa Claus, Indiana (47579) as the place to send the majority of the mail addressed to Santa Claus. This Spencer County, Indiana town of 2,100 handles nearly 1 million Santa Claus letters every year from around the world from at least 10 countries and in various languages.
- In 1964, at the height of his popularity, Smokey Bear, mascot of the U.S. Forest Service, received so much fan mail that he was assigned his own ZIP code, 20252.
- ZIP code 12345 belongs to the world headquarters for General Electric in Schenectady, New York. Each year, the facility receives many letters from children to Santa Claus, addressed to "North Pole 12345".
- Game show viewers of the 1960s–1980s became familiar with announcer spots for the Spiegel catalog and the company's address, "Chicago 60609."
- In a popular episode of the 1960s TV series Batman, the villain Chandell mentioned being located in ZIP code 9999979. Although the producers knew this could not be an actual ZIP code, it is likely that this was used as an attempt to bring more attention to ZIP codes as part of mailing addresses.
- In the movie based on the Green Acres television series, Hooterville's ZIP code was given by Mr. Drucker as "40516 and a half". 40516 is in Lexington, Kentucky, Kentucky.
- Public-service announcements for the government's Federal Citizen Information Center's Consumer Information Catalog have become famous for its ZIP code in Pueblo, Colorado, Colorado, 81009 (which is assigned uniquely to the Center).
- Newton Falls, Ohio, Ohio, has the ZIP code 44444. During the 1970s, signs at the municipal boundaries proclaimed "Newton Falls has zip!" The slogan is now in use on a Web site, 44444.com.
- ZIP codes can take on a certain amount of cachet or become bywords: 90210, in Beverly Hills, California, California, probably the most famous example, appears in the titles of two Beverly Hills–centered television shows: Beverly Hills 90210 and Dr. 90210.
- On Seinfeld, Newman (Seinfeld), a USPS employee, tells his girlfriend "I'll tell you a little secret about ZIP codes. They're meaningless!"
- On the PBS children's series ZOOM the young cast members would sing the address "ZOOM, that's Z double-oh M/Box Three Five Oh/Boston Mass Oh Two One Three Four." 02134 is the ZIP code of WGBH, the show's originating station in Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts. When the show was reincarnated in 1999, the show's URL was recited instead.
- In the "The Day the Violence Died" episode of The Simpsons, the formerly bankrupt Meyers Studios (creators of the Itchy & Scratchy show) are revived after the owner of the defunct studio successfully sues the U.S. Postal Service for copyright infringement on a character that resembles Mr. ZIP, aptly named Manic Mailman.
- In another Simpsons episode, "Sunday, Cruddy Sunday," Lisa Simpson asks a postal employee, during a class trip to the post office, what the purpose of the ZIP + 4 code is. Little does she know that she is being monitored by authorities who suspect she has discovered that the code has no importance; the tour guide, Postmaster Bill, mentions under his breath that they are "citizen-relocation codes" and "hopefully we'll never need them".
- Starting in 2000, National Geographic magazine instituted a regular monthly feature to focus on the community in one ZIP code.
- Mugs and T-shirts for sale in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, name 02138, the Harvard Square (which includes Harvard University) ZIP code.
- A new magazine featuring Harvard graduates is entitled 02138.
- In the television mystery series Veronica Mars, "09ers" is a slang term used to describe students whose families live in the fictitious ZIP code 90909, the affluent part of Neptune, California.
- The comic strip "Peanuts" featured a character called 5 (Peanuts), whose last name is a ZIP code in Sebastopol, California: 95472.
- The television show Full House makes fun of Wayne, New Jersey's palindromic zip code (07470).
- Supai, AZ (86435), located in the bottom of Havasupai canyon has the distinction of the only pack mule train carried mail run in the nation.
Miscellaneous
- Until modern switching equipment was introduced in the 1980s, telephone customers in Grants Pass, Oregon could dial the last five digits of the assigned seven-digit local telephone number. As a result, to reach the town's post office, users dialed the ZIP code, 97526.
- ZIP code 10048 was assigned to the World Trade Center complex in New York, New York (until its destruction on September 11, 2001 attacks).
- The code 77230 was assigned in 2005 for mail delivery to victims of Hurricane Katrina being housed at the Houston Astrodome, and is still in service today as a P.O.-box-only code.
- The White House has its own secret ZIP + 4 code, separate from the publicly known 20500, for the President of the United States and the First Family to receive private mail. "Presidential Pen Pals," Time, January 271997.
- A particularly unusual ZIP code is 48222, a marine post office in Detroit, Michigan used to route mail to and from passing Great Lakes commercial vessels, the last of its kind in the ZIP code system.
- Barefoot Bay, Brevard County, Florida is a deed restricted community mobile home park large enough to have its own ZIP code: 32976.
- The Glendale Galleria in Glendale, California, is a shopping center large enough to have its own ZIP code: 91210.
- ZIP code 17927 of Centralia, Pennsylvania, where an underground mine fire has been burning for over 40 years, was revoked by the USPS in 2002.
- Twelve-digit ZIP codes (e.g. those printed by the IRS on their correspondence) are ZIP+4 codes followed by a 2 digit delivery point and then a 1 digit check-number, which is exactly what a full POSTNET code represents.
See also
U.S. Postal Service codes
References
External links
- ZIP Code lookup webpage from the United States Postal Service.
- iBegin Geocoder Free download of all U.S. ZIP codes, including city, state, latitude, longitude, and county.
- PopularData.com Open Source zip code database put together from a variety of sources. (ZIP, CITY, STATE, COUNTY, LATITUDE, LONGITUDE, ZIP_CLASS)
- ZIP Code datasets freely available from the US Census Bureau.
- 2000 Census ZIP Code Tabulation Areas Raw list of ZCTAs from the Census Bureau with extra info like latitude/longitude (Note: This is 2000 ZIP Code data)
promoted the use of ZIP codes for the USPS during the 1960s and 1970s.The
ZIP code is the system of postal codes used by the United States Postal Service (USPS). The letters
ZIP, an acronym for
Zone Improvement Plan, "ZIP Code," from International Paper Knowledge Center glossary are written properly in capital letters and were chosen to suggest that the
mail travels more efficiently, and therefore more quickly, when senders use it. The basic format consists of five numerical digits. An extended
ZIP + 4 code includes the five digits of the ZIP code, a hyphen and then four more digits, which allow a piece of
mail to be directed to a more precise location than by the ZIP code alone.
ZIP Code was originally registered as a
trademark by the U.S. Postal Service but its registration has since expired. Trademark status information, from United States Patent and Trademark Office
Background
The postal service implemented
postal zones for large cities in 1943. For example:
Mr. John Smith
3256 Epiphenomenal Avenue
Minneapolis
16, Minnesota
Wikimedia Foundation Inc.
200 2nd Ave. South #358
St. Petersburg
1, Florida
The "16" in the first example and "1" in the second is the number of the
postal zone within the city.
By the early 1960s a more general system was needed, and on July 1, 1963, non-mandatory ZIP codes were announced for the whole country. Robert Moon (postal inspector), an employee of the post office, is considered the father of the ZIP code. He submitted his proposal in 1944 while working as a postal inspector.
The post office only gives credit to Moon for the first three digits of the ZIP code, which describe the region of the country. In most cases, the last two digits coincide with the older postal zone number, thus:
Mr. John Smith
3256 Epiphenomenal Avenue
Minneapolis, Minnesota 554
16
Wikimedia Foundation Inc.
200 2nd Ave. South #358
St. Petersburg, Florida 337
01
In 1967, these were made mandatory for second- and third-class
bulk mailers, and the system was soon adopted generally. The United States Post Office used a
cartoon character, Mr. ZIP, to promote use of the ZIP code. He was often depicted with a legend such as "USE ZIP CODES" in the selvage of panes of Postage stamps or on labels contained in, or the covers of, booklet panes of stamps. Curiously enough, the only time the Postal Service issued a stamp promoting the ZIP code, in
1974, Mr. ZIP was not depicted.
ZIP + 4
In 1983, the U.S. Postal Service began using an expanded ZIP code system called "ZIP + 4", often called "plus-four codes" or "add-on codes."
Wikimedia Foundation Inc.
200 2nd Ave. South #358
St. Petersburg, FL 33701-4313
Furthermore, recently the Postal Service started a "Find a ZIP Code" feature on its website, which provides an address format that is most compatible with its optical character recognition, or OCR, scanners:
WIKIMEDIA FOUNDATION INC
200 2ND AVE S # 358
SAINT PETERSBURG FL 33701-4313
A ZIP + 4 code uses the basic five-digit code plus an additional four digits to identify a geographic segment within the five-digit delivery area, such as a city block, a group of apartments, an individual high-volume receiver of mail or any other unit that could use an extra identifier to aid in efficient mail sorting and delivery. Use of the plus-four code is not required except for certain presorted mailings. In general, mail is read by a
Multiline Optical Character Reader (MLOCR) that instantly determines the correct ZIP + 4 code from the address and — along with the even more specific delivery point — sprays a POSTNET barcode on the face of the mailpiece that corresponds to 11 digits. This technology has greatly increased the speed and accuracy of mail delivery and, in turn, kept costs nearly constant for over a decade.
For Post office boxes, the general (but not invariable) rule is that each box has its own ZIP + 4 code. The add-on code is often one of the following: the last four digits of the box number (e.g., PO Box 58001, Washington DC 20037-8001), zero plus the last three digits of the box number (e.g., PO Box 12344, Chicago IL 60612-0344), or, if the box number consists of fewer than four digits, enough zeros added to the front of the box number to make it a four-digit number (e.g., PO Box 52, Garrett Park MD 20896-0052). However, there is no uniform rule, so the ZIP + 4 code must be looked up individually for each box.
It is common to use add-on code 9998 for mail addressed to the postmaster (to which requests for pictorial cancellations are usually addressed), 9999 for
poste restante and other high-numbered add-on codes for freepost. For a unique ZIP code (explained below), the add-on code is typically 0001.
Experiment selling the +4 addresses
In August
2007 the Post Office began an experimental program selling the four number extension to businesses. The first company to do this was Saks Fifth Avenue which has gotten a zip code of 10022-SHOE code for the fourth floor shoe department in its flagship Fifth Avenue (Manhattan) store. Shoe Store In New York Opens With New Zip Code - CBS2.com - August 17, 2007
Postal bar code
The ZIP code is often translated into a barcode called
POSTNET that is printed on the mailpiece to make it easier for automated machines to sort. Unlike most barcode symbologies, Postnet uses long and short bars, not thin and thick bars. The barcode can be printed by the person who sends the mail (some word-processing programs such as Word Perfect and Microsoft Word include the feature), or the post office will put one on when it processes the piece. The post office generally uses Optical character recognition technology, though a human may have to read the address if absolutely necessary. (The automated machinery has the unfortunate tendency to paste the coding over the bottom half-inch of postcards, often obliterating the signature; postcard printers have begun blocking a section off where the barcode will go to compensate.)
People who send bulk mail can get a
discount on
postage if they have pre-printed the barcode themselves. This requires more than just a simple
typeface; mailing lists must be standardized with up-to-date CASS certified software that adds/verifies a full, correct ZIP + 4 code and an additional two Numerical digits representing the exact
delivery point. Furthermore, mail must be presorted in a specific scheme and be accompanied by documentation verifying this. These steps are usually done with PAVE-certified software that also prints the barcoded address labels and barcoded sack or tray tags.
This means that every single mailable point in the country has its own 12-digit number (at least in theory). The delivery-point digits (the 10th and 11th digits) are calculated based on the primary or secondary number of the address. The USPS publishes the rules for calculating the delivery point in a document called the CASS Technical Guide. The last digit is
always a
check digit, which is obtained by summing all 5, 9 or 11 digits, taking the
Modulo base 10 of this sum (i.e. the remainder after dividing by 10) and finally
subtracting this from 10. (Thus, the check digit for 10001-0001 00 would be 7, since 1+1+1=3, 3%10=3 and 10-3=7.) An application needs only to print something like /100010001007/ in the 12-Point (typography) Postnet font to create a valid barcode. The slashes "/" are translated into start/stop characters (one long bar), and each digit is translated into a sequence of two-out-of-five code.
On business-reply mail, the Facing Identification Mark code primarily indicates the orientation (facing) of the mailpiece, since there is generally not a postage stamp or postage meter imprint containing fluorescent ink (which is usually used by the facing machine to orient mail.) Additionally, FIM codes A and C indicate that a Postnet bar code is present, allowing this mail to bypass the Multiline Optical Character Reader and go straight to a barcode scanning machine. For that reason, even though courtesy reply mail and
metered reply mail are mailed with a stamp or a postage-meter imprint, they typically carry a FIM code, namely FIM A, to indicate that the Postnet bar code is present. The FIM D barcode is used for computer-generated indicia from online postage meters.
Structure and allocation
By geography
ZIP codes are numbered with the first digit representing a certain group of U.S. states, the second and third digits together representing a
region in that group (or perhaps a large city) and the fourth and fifth digits representing a group of delivery addresses within that region. The main town in a region (if applicable) often gets the first ZIP codes for that region; afterward, the numerical order often follows the alphabetical order.
Generally, the first three digits designate a sectional center facility (SCF), the mail-sorting and -distribution center for an area. A sectional center facility may have more than one three-digit code assigned to it. For example, the Northern Virginia sectional center facility in Merrifield is assigned codes 220, 221, 222 and 223. In some cases, a sectional center facility may serve an area in an adjacent state, usually due to the lack of an appropriate location for a center in that region. For example, 739 in Oklahoma is assigned to
Liberal, Kansas; 865 in Arizona is assigned to
Gallup, New Mexico; and 961 in California to
Reno, Nevada.
Geographically, many of the lowest ZIP codes are in the New England (U.S.) region, since these begin with '0'. Also in the '0' region are
Puerto Rico, the
US Virgin Islands and
APO/FPO military addresses for personnel stationed in
Europe. The lowest ZIP code is in Holtsville, New York (00501, a ZIP Code exclusively for the
U.S. Internal Revenue Service center there). Other low ZIP codes are 00601 for Adjuntas, Puerto Rico; 01001 for Agawam, Massachusetts, and 01002 for
Amherst, Massachusetts. Up until 2001 there were also six zip codes even lower than 00501 that were numbered from 00210 to 00215 (located in
Portsmouth, New Hampshire) and were used by the Diversity Immigrant Visa program to receive applications from non-US citizens.
The numbers increase southward along the East Coast, such as 02115 (Boston, Massachusetts), 10001 (New York City), 19103 (Philadelphia), 20008 (
Washington, D.C.), 30303 (
Atlanta, Georgia) and 33130 (Miami, Florida) (these are only examples as each of these cities contain several zip codes in the same range). From there, the numbers increase heading westward and northward. For example, 40202 is in Louisville, Kentucky, 50309 in Des Moines, Iowa, 60601 in Chicago, 77063 in
Houston, 80202 in Denver, Colorado, 94111 in
San Francisco, California, 98101 in Seattle, Washington, and 99950 in
Ketchikan, Alaska.
The first digit of the ZIP code is allocated as follows:
- 0 = Connecticut (CT), Massachusetts (MA), Maine (ME), New Hampshire (NH), New Jersey (NJ), Puerto Rico (PR), Rhode Island (RI), Vermont (VT), Virgin Islands (VI), APO Europe (AE), FPO Europe (AE)
- 1 = Delaware (DE), New York (NY), Pennsylvania (PA)
- 2 = District of Columbia (DC), Maryland (MD), North Carolina (NC), South Carolina (SC), Virginia (VA), West Virginia (WV)
- 3 = Alabama (AL), Florida (FL), Georgia (GA), Mississippi (MS), Tennessee (TN), APO Americas (AA), FPO Americas (AA)
- 4 = Indiana (IN), Kentucky (KY), Michigan (MI), Ohio (OH)
- 5 = Iowa (IA), Minnesota (MN), Montana (MT), North Dakota (ND), South Dakota (SD), Wisconsin (WI)
- 6 = Illinois (IL), Kansas (KS), Missouri (MO), Nebraska (NE)
- 7 = Arkansas (AR), Louisiana (LA), Oklahoma (OK), Texas (TX)
- 8 = Arizona (AZ), Colorado (CO), Idaho (ID), New Mexico (NM), Nevada (NV), Utah (UT), Wyoming (WY)
- 9 = Alaska (AK), American Samoa (AS), California (CA), Guam (GU), Hawaii (HI), Marshall Islands (MH), Federated States of Micronesia (FM), Northern Mariana Islands (MP), Oregon (OR), Palau (PW), Washington (WA), APO Pacific (AP), FPO Pacific (AP)
The next two digits represent the sectional center facility (e.g. 432xx = Columbus OH), and the fourth and fifth digits represents the area of the city (if in a metropolitan area), or a village/town (outside metro areas): 43209 (4=Ohio,32=Columbus,09=Bexley). When a sectional center facility's area crosses state lines, that facility is assigned separate three-digit prefixes for the states that it serves; thus, it is possible to identify the state associated with any ZIP Code just by looking at the first three digits.
Despite the geographic derivation of most ZIP codes, the codes themselves do not represent geographic regions; they generally correspond to address groups or delivery routes. Consequently, ZIP Code "areas" can overlap, be subsets of each other, or be artificial constructs with no geographic area. Similarly, in areas without regular postal routes (rural route areas) or no mail delivery (undeveloped areas), ZIP Codes are not assigned or are based on sparse delivery routes, and hence the boundary between ZIP code areas is undefined.
For example, U.S. government agencies in and around the nation's capital are assigned ZIP codes starting with 20200 to 20599, which are Washington, D.C., ZIP codes, even if they are not located in Washington itself. While the
White House itself is located in ZIP code 20006, it has the ZIP code 20500. The
Nuclear Regulatory Commission is located in
Rockville, Maryland, at ZIP code 20852, but has been assigned by the Postal Service the address "Washington, DC 20555". The United States Patent and Trademark Office used to be located in Crystal City, Virginia at ZIP Code 22202 but was assigned by the Postal Service the address "Washington, DC 20231"; however, since its move to
Alexandria, Virginia, it uses the ZIP + 4 code 22313-1450.
Rarely, a locality is assigned a ZIP code that does not match the rest of the state. This is when the locality is so isolated that it is served from a sectional center in another state. For example, Fishers Island, New York, bears the ZIP code 06390 and is served from Connecticut — all other New York ZIP codes (excepting those at Holtsville for the
Internal Revenue Service) begin with "1". Similarly, some Texas ZIP codes are served from New Mexico and thus bear codes beginning with "8" rather than "7". Returned government parcels from the District of Columbia are sent to ZIP codes beginning with "569", so that returned parcels are security checked at a remote facility (this was put into place after the
2001 anthrax attacks).
ZIP codes only loosely tied to cities
An address's ZIP code and the "city" name written on the same line do not necessarily mean that that address is within that city. The Postal Service designates a
single "default" place name for each ZIP code. This may be an actual incorporated town or city, a subentity of a town or city or an unincorporated census-designated place. Additional place names, also of any of these types, may be recognized as "acceptable" for a certain ZIP code. Still others are deemed "not acceptable", and if used may result in a delay in mail delivery.
Default place names are typically the actual city or town that the address is located in. However, for many cities that have incorporated since ZIP codes were introduced the actual city name is only "acceptable" and not the "default" place name. Many databases automatically assign the "default" place name for a ZIP code, without regard to any "acceptable" place names. For example, Centennial, Colorado is divided among seven ZIP codes assigned to "
Aurora, Colorado", "
Englewood, Colorado" or "Littleton, Colorado" as its "default" place names. Thus, from the perspective of the U.S. Postal Service, the city of Centennial and its 100,000 residents do not exist - they are part of Aurora, Englewood or Littleton. In the ZIP-code directory, Centennial addresses are listed under those three cities. And since it is "acceptable" to write "Centennial" in conjunction with any of the seven ZIP codes, one can write "Centennial" in an address that is actually in Aurora, Englewood, or Littleton, as long as it is in one of the shared ZIP Codes.
"Acceptable" place names are often added to a ZIP code in cases where the ZIP-code boundaries divide them between two or more cities, as in the case of Centennial. However, in many cases only the "default" name can be used, even when many addresses in the ZIP code are in another city. For example, approximately 85% of the area served by the ZIP code 85254, to which the place name "Scottsdale, Arizona," is assigned, is actually inside the city limits of neighboring
Phoenix, Arizona. This is because the post office that serves this area is in Scottsdale. This has led some residents of the ZIP code to believe that they live in Scottsdale when they actually live in Phoenix. A Scottsdale website listing the positive and negative aspects of the city mentioned the 85254 ZIP code as a positive aspect because "Scottsdale" is being used for businesses located outside the Scottsdale city limits.
This phenomenon is repeated across the country. The previously mentioned Englewood is a land-locked, inner-ring suburb that was built out by the 1960s. Its post office served the area that is now the high-growth southern tier of the Denver-Aurora Metropolitan Area, and ZIP codes in this area were assigned "Englewood" as their "default" place name. An employment center as large as downtown Denver has grown in this area, and its office parks are the headquarters for many internationally recognized corporations. Even though they are actually located in other cities, they indicate "Englewood" as their location, as this is the "default" postal place name. As a result, there are really two "Englewoods" — the actual city, small and with a largely working-class residential population, and, a number of miles away, the postal "Englewood," a vast suburban area of upscale subdivisions and office parks that have nothing to do with the City of Englewood yet share a split identity with it solely because of ZIP codes. People who say that they live or work in "Englewood" and identify closely with it may rarely enter the actual city of that name. In Indiana the zip code for a town usually indicates the zip code for its corresponding township as nearly all of Indiana's small town post offices have rural routes.
"Acceptable place names" also come into play in areas of the country where many citizens identify more strongly with a particular urban center than the municipality they actually live in. For example, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania has 130 distinct municipalities, but many of the county's residents, and even some residents of adjacent counties, commonly use "
Pittsburgh, PA" as their postal address. The same thing applies in many cities that have more than one zip code, like Evansville, Indiana or Jacksonville, Florida.
Finally, many ZIP codes are for villages, census-designated places, portions of cities, or other entities that are not municipalities. For example, ZIP code 03750 is for
Etna, New Hampshire, but Etna is not a city or town; it is actually a Village (United States)#new Hampshire in the town of Hanover, New Hampshire, which itself is assigned the ZIP code 03755. Another example is ZIP code 08043, which corresponds to the census-designated place of Kirkwood, NJ but actually serves the entirety of
Voorhees Township, NJ. This is also the case in
LaGrange, New York, a portion of which is served by the 12603 ZIP code based in the neighboring
Poughkeepsie (town), New York. The rest of LaGrange is served by the LaGrangeville Post Office. LaGrangeville is itself, not a town at all, but a section of LaGrange. Another example is Armstrong Township of Vanderburgh County, Indiana. While the rest of the county uses the 477 prefix, Armstrong Township, despite having no incorporated town, uses the zip code 47617 and addresses itself "Armstrong, Indiana".
The postal designations for place names become
de facto locations for their addresses, and as a result it is difficult to convince residents and businesses that they actually are located in another city or town different from the "default" place name associated with their ZIP codes. Because of the confusion and lack of identity generated by this situation, some cities, such as Signal Hill, California, have successfully petitioned the Postal Service to change ZIP-code boundaries or create new ZIP codes so that their cities can be the "default" place name for addresses within the ZIP code.
This confusion also can have financial implications for local governments, because mail volume is among the factors used by the U.S. Census Bureau to estimate population changes between decennial census enumerations. Sometimes local officials in a community that is not the "default" place name for a zip code but is an "acceptable" place name will advise residents to always use the name of the community, because if the census estimate of that town's population is low they will get fewer State and Federal funds that are computed based on population.
Division and reallocation of ZIP codes
Like
area codes, ZIP codes are sometimes divided and changed, especially when a
rural area becomes
suburban. Typically, the new codes become effective once announced, and a grace period (e.g., one year) is provided in which the new and old codes are used concurrently so that postal patrons in the affected area can notify correspondents, order new stationery, etc.Sam Roberts, "An Elite ZIP Code Becomes Harder to Crack,"
The New York Times, March 212007, page C15
Most significantly, in rapidly developing suburbs it is sometimes necessary to open a new sectional center facility, which must then be allocated its own three-digit ZIP-code prefix or prefixes. Such allocation can be done in various ways. For example, when a new sectional center facility was opened at Dulles Airport in Virginia, the prefix 201 was allocated to that facility; therefore, for all post offices to be served by that sectional center facility the ZIP code changed from an old code beginning with 220 or 221 to a new code or codes beginning with 201. However, when a new sectional center facility was opened to serve
Montgomery County, Maryland, no new prefix was assigned. Instead, ZIP codes in the 207 and 208 ranges, which had previously been assigned alphabetically, were reshuffled so that 207xx ZIP codes in the county were changed to 208xx codes, while 208xx codes outside that county were changed to 207xx codes. Because Silver Spring, Maryland (whose postal area includes Wheaton, Maryland) has its own prefix, 209, there was no need to apply the reshuffling to Silver Spring; instead, all mail going to 209xx ZIP codes was simply rerouted to the new sectional center facility.
ZIP codes also change when postal boundaries are realigned. For example, at the same time at which the above-noted change in Montgomery County took place, and under pressure from then-D.C. Mayor
Marion Barry, the USPS realigned the postal boundaries between the District of Columbia and Maryland to match the actual boundary. Previously, many inner suburbs, such as
Bethesda, Maryland and Takoma Park, Maryland, had been in the Washington, D.C., postal area. As a result of the change, ZIP codes in Maryland beginning with 200 were changed to new ZIP codes beginning with 207, 208 or 209, depending on their location, and ZIP codes straddling the D.C.-Maryland line were split. For example, 20014 (Bethesda) became 20814, while the Maryland portion of 20012 (Takoma Park) became 20912.
By type/use
There are four types of ZIP codes: Unique (assigned to a single high-volume address), P.O.-box-only (used only for P.O. boxes at a given facility, not for any other type of delivery), Military (used to route mail for the U.S. military) and Standard (all other ZIP codes). As examples of Unique ZIP codes, certain governmental agencies, universities, businesses or buildings that receive extremely high volumes of mail have their own ZIP codes, such as 81009 for the
Federal Citizen Information Center of the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) FCIC – About US in
Pueblo, Colorado; 30385 for BellSouth in
Atlanta; 21412 for Bancroft Hall, the midshipman dormitory at the United States Naval Academy; and 12345 for General Electric in
Schenectady, New York.An example of a P.O.-box-only ZIP code is 22313, which is used for P.O. boxes at the main post office in Alexandria, Virginia. In the area surrounding that post office, home and business mail delivery addresses use ZIP code 22314, which is thus a Standard ZIP code.
The above will be made clearer by examining the allocation of ZIP codes in
Princeton, New Jersey:
- 08540 - standard (deliveries in most of the Princeton postal area)
- 08541 - unique (Educational Testing Service)
- 08542 - standard (deliveries in the central area of the borough of Princeton, and also some PO boxes)
- 08543 - PO box only (PO boxes at the main post office)
- 08544 - unique (Princeton University)
Non-Standard Examples
While ZIP codes classified as Unique by the USPS always serve a single address, it should not be assumed that a zip code is Unique simply because it serves a single building, complex, or address. Large facilities are often given P.O.-box-only or Standard ZIP codes rather than Unique ZIP codes, because USPS carriers must distribute the mail to multiple boxes, offices, or buildings within the facility. In a Unique ZIP code, mail distribution within the single address is handled internally, rather than by USPS employees.
A few ZIP codes fall outside the three types. Military mail and Military mail ZIP codes are codes in use for Armed Forces of the United States members and their dependents overseas. The state postal abbreviations AP (Area Pacific), AA (Area Americas) and AE (Area Europe) were created in 1991 to serve these communities; previously, APO and FPO mail was addressed to APO San Francisco, APO Miami and APO New York City respectively, and APO/FPO ZIP codes were numerically close to the allocations for those cities. The creation of these new state codes necessitated the rewrite of thousands of pieces of postal software and still occasionally causes confusion, as the actual numeric ZIP codes used by the APO/FPO system did not change and are still in use.
New York City, NY is an extreme example. It is composed of five Counties that are also Boroughs within the city. They each have one or more SCF Codes.
*Brooklyn, New York:
112
*Bronx, New York:
104
*New York, New York (Manhattan):
:
100 (Standard);
:
101 (P.O. Boxes and Unique);
:
102 (P.O. Boxes and Unique).
*Queens:
:
110 (Floral Park);
:
111(Long Island City);
:
113 (Flushing);
:
114 (Jamaica);
:
116 (Far Rockaway)
*Staten Island:
103
:In the case of the first four Boroughs, the official and “accepted” names are the same, while—in the case of Queens—the Borough name is NOT accepted as an address, the SCF name is. In addition, the numerous “Accepted” names are official as well.
:In the case of
SCF 110 (Floral Park), it serves both eastern Jamaica, eastern Flushing, and northwestern
Nassau County, New York as well.
Other uses
Delivery services
Delivery services other than the USPS, such as FedEx, United Parcel Service and DHL require a ZIP code for optimal internal routing of a package. This spares customers from being required to use some other routing designator, such as the IATA airport code of the destination airport or
railhead.
Statistics
ZIP codes are used not only for tracking of mail but in gathering geographical statistics in the United States. The United States Census Bureau has data that include the
latitude and
longitude of the center-point of some ZIP codes (called ZIP Code Tabulation Areas or ZCTAs). The Census Bureau does not keep up-to-date datasets of all ZIP codes. Complete datasets are commercially available.
Marketing
The data are often used in
direct mail campaigns in a process called ZIP Code marketing, developed by Martin Baier. Point of Sale cashiers sometimes ask consumers their home ZIP code. Besides providing purchasing-pattern data useful in determining the location of new business establishments, retailers can use directories to correlate this ZIP code with the name on a credit card to obtain a consumer's full address and telephone number. ZIP-coded data are also used in analyzing geographic factors in risk, an
insurance-
industry and banking practice
pejoratively known as
redlining. This can cause problems (e.g. expensive insurance) for people living near a town with a high crime rate and sharing its ZIP code, while they themselves actually live in a relatively crime free town (e.g. south west part of 94303).
Internet
ZIP code data is an integral part of dealer/store locator software on many web sites, especially bricks and clicks websites. This software processes a user-input ZIP code and returns a list of store or business locations, usually in order of increasing distance from the input ZIP code.
Pop culture
- Santa Claus gets so much mail form children that the U.S. Postal Service capitalized on the name in the 50's by using the post office in Santa Claus, Indiana (47579) as the place to send the majority of the mail addressed to Santa Claus. This Spencer County, Indiana town of 2,100 handles nearly 1 million Santa Claus letters every year from around the world from at least 10 countries and in various languages.
- In 1964, at the height of his popularity, Smokey Bear, mascot of the U.S. Forest Service, received so much fan mail that he was assigned his own ZIP code, 20252.
- ZIP code 12345 belongs to the world headquarters for General Electric in Schenectady, New York. Each year, the facility receives many letters from children to Santa Claus, addressed to "North Pole 12345".
- Game show viewers of the 1960s–1980s became familiar with announcer spots for the Spiegel catalog and the company's address, "Chicago 60609."
- In a popular episode of the 1960s TV series Batman, the villain Chandell mentioned being located in ZIP code 9999979. Although the producers knew this could not be an actual ZIP code, it is likely that this was used as an attempt to bring more attention to ZIP codes as part of mailing addresses.
- In the movie based on the Green Acres television series, Hooterville's ZIP code was given by Mr. Drucker as "40516 and a half". 40516 is in Lexington, Kentucky, Kentucky.
- Public-service announcements for the government's Federal Citizen Information Center's Consumer Information Catalog have become famous for its ZIP code in Pueblo, Colorado, Colorado, 81009 (which is assigned uniquely to the Center).
- Newton Falls, Ohio, Ohio, has the ZIP code 44444. During the 1970s, signs at the municipal boundaries proclaimed "Newton Falls has zip!" The slogan is now in use on a Web site, 44444.com.
- ZIP codes can take on a certain amount of cachet or become bywords: 90210, in Beverly Hills, California, California, probably the most famous example, appears in the titles of two Beverly Hills–centered television shows: Beverly Hills 90210 and Dr. 90210.
- On Seinfeld, Newman (Seinfeld), a USPS employee, tells his girlfriend "I'll tell you a little secret about ZIP codes. They're meaningless!"
- On the PBS children's series ZOOM the young cast members would sing the address "ZOOM, that's Z double-oh M/Box Three Five Oh/Boston Mass Oh Two One Three Four." 02134 is the ZIP code of WGBH, the show's originating station in Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts. When the show was reincarnated in 1999, the show's URL was recited instead.
- In the "The Day the Violence Died" episode of The Simpsons, the formerly bankrupt Meyers Studios (creators of the Itchy & Scratchy show) are revived after the owner of the defunct studio successfully sues the U.S. Postal Service for copyright infringement on a character that resembles Mr. ZIP, aptly named Manic Mailman.
- In another Simpsons episode, "Sunday, Cruddy Sunday," Lisa Simpson asks a postal employee, during a class trip to the post office, what the purpose of the ZIP + 4 code is. Little does she know that she is being monitored by authorities who suspect she has discovered that the code has no importance; the tour guide, Postmaster Bill, mentions under his breath that they are "citizen-relocation codes" and "hopefully we'll never need them".
- Starting in 2000, National Geographic magazine instituted a regular monthly feature to focus on the community in one ZIP code.
- Mugs and T-shirts for sale in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, name 02138, the Harvard Square (which includes Harvard University) ZIP code.
- A new magazine featuring Harvard graduates is entitled 02138.
- In the television mystery series Veronica Mars, "09ers" is a slang term used to describe students whose families live in the fictitious ZIP code 90909, the affluent part of Neptune, California.
- The comic strip "Peanuts" featured a character called 5 (Peanuts), whose last name is a ZIP code in Sebastopol, California: 95472.
- The television show Full House makes fun of Wayne, New Jersey's palindromic zip code (07470).
- Supai, AZ (86435), located in the bottom of Havasupai canyon has the distinction of the only pack mule train carried mail run in the nation.
Miscellaneous
- Until modern switching equipment was introduced in the 1980s, telephone customers in Grants Pass, Oregon could dial the last five digits of the assigned seven-digit local telephone number. As a result, to reach the town's post office, users dialed the ZIP code, 97526.
- ZIP code 10048 was assigned to the World Trade Center complex in New York, New York (until its destruction on September 11, 2001 attacks).
- The code 77230 was assigned in 2005 for mail delivery to victims of Hurricane Katrina being housed at the Houston Astrodome, and is still in service today as a P.O.-box-only code.
- The White House has its own secret ZIP + 4 code, separate from the publicly known 20500, for the President of the United States and the First Family to receive private mail. "Presidential Pen Pals," Time, January 271997.
- A particularly unusual ZIP code is 48222, a marine post office in Detroit, Michigan used to route mail to and from passing Great Lakes commercial vessels, the last of its kind in the ZIP code system.
- Barefoot Bay, Brevard County, Florida is a deed restricted community mobile home park large enough to have its own ZIP code: 32976.
- The Glendale Galleria in Glendale, California, is a shopping center large enough to have its own ZIP code: 91210.
- ZIP code 17927 of Centralia, Pennsylvania, where an underground mine fire has been burning for over 40 years, was revoked by the USPS in 2002.
- Twelve-digit ZIP codes (e.g. those printed by the IRS on their correspondence) are ZIP+4 codes followed by a 2 digit delivery point and then a 1 digit check-number, which is exactly what a full POSTNET code represents.
See also
U.S. Postal Service codes
References
External links
- ZIP Code lookup webpage from the United States Postal Service.
- iBegin Geocoder Free download of all U.S. ZIP codes, including city, state, latitude, longitude, and county.
- PopularData.com Open Source zip code database put together from a variety of sources. (ZIP, CITY, STATE, COUNTY, LATITUDE, LONGITUDE, ZIP_CLASS)
- ZIP Code datasets freely available from the US Census Bureau.
- 2000 Census ZIP Code Tabulation Areas Raw list of ZCTAs from the Census Bureau with extra info like latitude/longitude (Note: This is 2000 ZIP Code data)
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