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I am writing a web application, that is US specific, so the format that other countries use for postal codes are not important. I have a list of us zip codes that i am trying to load into a database table that includes the

  • 5 digit us zip code
  • latitude
  • longitude
  • usps classification code
  • state code
  • city

the zip code is the primary key as it is what i will be querying against. i started using a medium int 5 but that truncates the zip codes that have leading zeros.

i considered using a char5 but am concerned about the performance hit of indexing against a char variable.

so my question is what is the best mysql datatype to store zip codes as?

Note: i have seen it in several other questions related to zip codes. I am only interested in US 5 digit zip codes. So there is no need to take other countries postal code formats into consideration.

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What's the value add in keeping the leading zeros? So long as you display the leading zeroes (.PadLeft), I would keep your database optimized as far as possible. – JustLoren Sep 29 at 17:30
The zeroes are important data in a zip code. Zip codes are not integers, even if they're made up entirely of numbers. – ceejayoz Sep 29 at 17:32
thats a fair point. i did a few test cases querying for 00210 etc and it returned the proper record. i guess it is more of a gut feeling about concerns for data integrity. – Eric Sep 29 at 17:34
What about the newer Zip+4 codes? Ex: 91210-3889 – rlb.usa Sep 29 at 17:34
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@rlb.usa as far as i know the zip+4 format only provides a more specific location fix within that zip code, and being that i dont have that precise of dataset, and the fact that the precision of the current zip meets my requirements i am not worried about it. – Eric Sep 29 at 17:39
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3 Answers

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char(5) is the correct way to go. String indexing is quite fast, particularly when it is such a small data set.

You are correct in that you should never use an integer for a zip code, since it isn't truly numeric data.

Edit to add: Check out this for good reasons why you don't use numbers for non-numerically important data: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/893454/is-it-a-good-idea-to-use-an-integer-column-for-storing-us-zip-codes-in-a-database

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what non numeric data is in a 5 digit US zip code? – KM Sep 29 at 17:33
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Erich: Why not an integer? I would think that storing as an integer would help with type checking, you can add leading zeroes in the client, a character can be a non-digit ... Just wondering what point I'm missing. – John W Sep 29 at 17:34
The data set could be millions. Most likely there will be other addresses in the system where a zip is stored, and they should all be the same type – KM Sep 29 at 17:41
Zip Codes are not numeric data. Numeric data is data in which it makes sense to do mathematical operations on, which you would never do with a Zip Code. Otherwise, you are unfairly limiting your dataset. As far as the data set size, if the Zip code is truly the PK, there are only 99,999 values, a very small dataset relatively. – Erich Sep 29 at 17:59
if you have 10 million customers with zip codes that is a big dataset – KM Sep 29 at 18:08
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If he makes it Char(6), then he can handle Canadian postal codes as well.

When you consider that there is a maximum of 100,000 5-digit Zip Code and how little space it would take up even if you made the entire table memory-resident, there's no reason not to.

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i have no need for Canadian postal codes though. – Eric Sep 29 at 17:42
I saw that from the original post. I just figured I'd mention it in case anyone else looked at this question in the future looking for advice but had a situation where foreign postal codes MIGHT make a difference. My main point was that, in the age of gigabyte memory sticks, a zip code table is pretty small. (I dealt with these when memory was measured in KILObytes) – David Sep 30 at 12:09
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go with your medium INT(5) ZEROFILL, it should add the leading zeros for you. No need to impact the index and performance on a formatting issue.

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as a char 5 it took .0007 seconds as medint5 zerofill it took .0006 seconds. i think both are valid solutions, but i think i am going to go with char5 and take the slight performance hit for a little more peace of mind on the data integrity front. – Eric Sep 29 at 17:57

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