253

I'm looking for the ultimate postal code and zip code regex. I'm looking for something that will cover most (hopefully all) of the world.

4
  • 6
    One single regex for all postal codes would be useless for most cases, not to mention requiring a lot of unicode encoding. Much better is to check regex on a country-by-country basis so that you don't validate things like "New York, NY AF23Q" as correct. Feb 23, 2009 at 17:05
  • 151
    You have a problem. You write a regex for it. Now you have two problems.
    – Robert S.
    Feb 23, 2009 at 17:38
  • regexlib.com/Search.aspx?k=decimal&c=3&m=-1&ps=100 for validating a field go here Feb 6, 2010 at 5:35
  • 2
    The one that handles all possible future values.
    – Jodrell
    Oct 5, 2012 at 14:08

20 Answers 20

341

The unicode CLDR contains the postal code regex for each country. (158 regex's in total!)

Google also has a web service with per-country address formatting information, including postal codes, here - http://i18napis.appspot.com/address (I found that link via http://unicode.org/review/pri180/ )

Edit

Here a copy of postalCodeData.xml regex :

"GB", "GIR[ ]?0AA|((AB|AL|B|BA|BB|BD|BH|BL|BN|BR|BS|BT|CA|CB|CF|CH|CM|CO|CR|CT|CV|CW|DA|DD|DE|DG|DH|DL|DN|DT|DY|E|EC|EH|EN|EX|FK|FY|G|GL|GY|GU|HA|HD|HG|HP|HR|HS|HU|HX|IG|IM|IP|IV|JE|KA|KT|KW|KY|L|LA|LD|LE|LL|LN|LS|LU|M|ME|MK|ML|N|NE|NG|NN|NP|NR|NW|OL|OX|PA|PE|PH|PL|PO|PR|RG|RH|RM|S|SA|SE|SG|SK|SL|SM|SN|SO|SP|SR|SS|ST|SW|SY|TA|TD|TF|TN|TQ|TR|TS|TW|UB|W|WA|WC|WD|WF|WN|WR|WS|WV|YO|ZE)(\d[\dA-Z]?[ ]?\d[ABD-HJLN-UW-Z]{2}))|BFPO[ ]?\d{1,4}"
"JE", "JE\d[\dA-Z]?[ ]?\d[ABD-HJLN-UW-Z]{2}"
"GG", "GY\d[\dA-Z]?[ ]?\d[ABD-HJLN-UW-Z]{2}"
"IM", "IM\d[\dA-Z]?[ ]?\d[ABD-HJLN-UW-Z]{2}"
"US", "\d{5}([ \-]\d{4})?"
"CA", "[ABCEGHJKLMNPRSTVXY]\d[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z][ ]?\d[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]\d"
"DE", "\d{5}"
"JP", "\d{3}-\d{4}"
"FR", "\d{2}[ ]?\d{3}"
"AU", "\d{4}"
"IT", "\d{5}"
"CH", "\d{4}"
"AT", "\d{4}"
"ES", "\d{5}"
"NL", "\d{4}[ ]?[A-Z]{2}"
"BE", "\d{4}"
"DK", "\d{4}"
"SE", "\d{3}[ ]?\d{2}"
"NO", "\d{4}"
"BR", "\d{5}[\-]?\d{3}"
"PT", "\d{4}([\-]\d{3})?"
"FI", "\d{5}"
"AX", "22\d{3}"
"KR", "\d{3}[\-]\d{3}"
"CN", "\d{6}"
"TW", "\d{3}(\d{2})?"
"SG", "\d{6}"
"DZ", "\d{5}"
"AD", "AD\d{3}"
"AR", "([A-HJ-NP-Z])?\d{4}([A-Z]{3})?"
"AM", "(37)?\d{4}"
"AZ", "\d{4}"
"BH", "((1[0-2]|[2-9])\d{2})?"
"BD", "\d{4}"
"BB", "(BB\d{5})?"
"BY", "\d{6}"
"BM", "[A-Z]{2}[ ]?[A-Z0-9]{2}"
"BA", "\d{5}"
"IO", "BBND 1ZZ"
"BN", "[A-Z]{2}[ ]?\d{4}"
"BG", "\d{4}"
"KH", "\d{5}"
"CV", "\d{4}"
"CL", "\d{7}"
"CR", "\d{4,5}|\d{3}-\d{4}"
"HR", "\d{5}"
"CY", "\d{4}"
"CZ", "\d{3}[ ]?\d{2}"
"DO", "\d{5}"
"EC", "([A-Z]\d{4}[A-Z]|(?:[A-Z]{2})?\d{6})?"
"EG", "\d{5}"
"EE", "\d{5}"
"FO", "\d{3}"
"GE", "\d{4}"
"GR", "\d{3}[ ]?\d{2}"
"GL", "39\d{2}"
"GT", "\d{5}"
"HT", "\d{4}"
"HN", "(?:\d{5})?"
"HU", "\d{4}"
"IS", "\d{3}"
"IN", "\d{6}"
"ID", "\d{5}"
"IL", "\d{5}"
"JO", "\d{5}"
"KZ", "\d{6}"
"KE", "\d{5}"
"KW", "\d{5}"
"LA", "\d{5}"
"LV", "\d{4}"
"LB", "(\d{4}([ ]?\d{4})?)?"
"LI", "(948[5-9])|(949[0-7])"
"LT", "\d{5}"
"LU", "\d{4}"
"MK", "\d{4}"
"MY", "\d{5}"
"MV", "\d{5}"
"MT", "[A-Z]{3}[ ]?\d{2,4}"
"MU", "(\d{3}[A-Z]{2}\d{3})?"
"MX", "\d{5}"
"MD", "\d{4}"
"MC", "980\d{2}"
"MA", "\d{5}"
"NP", "\d{5}"
"NZ", "\d{4}"
"NI", "((\d{4}-)?\d{3}-\d{3}(-\d{1})?)?"
"NG", "(\d{6})?"
"OM", "(PC )?\d{3}"
"PK", "\d{5}"
"PY", "\d{4}"
"PH", "\d{4}"
"PL", "\d{2}-\d{3}"
"PR", "00[679]\d{2}([ \-]\d{4})?"
"RO", "\d{6}"
"RU", "\d{6}"
"SM", "4789\d"
"SA", "\d{5}"
"SN", "\d{5}"
"SK", "\d{3}[ ]?\d{2}"
"SI", "\d{4}"
"ZA", "\d{4}"
"LK", "\d{5}"
"TJ", "\d{6}"
"TH", "\d{5}"
"TN", "\d{4}"
"TR", "\d{5}"
"TM", "\d{6}"
"UA", "\d{5}"
"UY", "\d{5}"
"UZ", "\d{6}"
"VA", "00120"
"VE", "\d{4}"
"ZM", "\d{5}"
"AS", "96799"
"CC", "6799"
"CK", "\d{4}"
"RS", "\d{6}"
"ME", "8\d{4}"
"CS", "\d{5}"
"YU", "\d{5}"
"CX", "6798"
"ET", "\d{4}"
"FK", "FIQQ 1ZZ"
"NF", "2899"
"FM", "(9694[1-4])([ \-]\d{4})?"
"GF", "9[78]3\d{2}"
"GN", "\d{3}"
"GP", "9[78][01]\d{2}"
"GS", "SIQQ 1ZZ"
"GU", "969[123]\d([ \-]\d{4})?"
"GW", "\d{4}"
"HM", "\d{4}"
"IQ", "\d{5}"
"KG", "\d{6}"
"LR", "\d{4}"
"LS", "\d{3}"
"MG", "\d{3}"
"MH", "969[67]\d([ \-]\d{4})?"
"MN", "\d{6}"
"MP", "9695[012]([ \-]\d{4})?"
"MQ", "9[78]2\d{2}"
"NC", "988\d{2}"
"NE", "\d{4}"
"VI", "008(([0-4]\d)|(5[01]))([ \-]\d{4})?"
"PF", "987\d{2}"
"PG", "\d{3}"
"PM", "9[78]5\d{2}"
"PN", "PCRN 1ZZ"
"PW", "96940"
"RE", "9[78]4\d{2}"
"SH", "(ASCN|STHL) 1ZZ"
"SJ", "\d{4}"
"SO", "\d{5}"
"SZ", "[HLMS]\d{3}"
"TC", "TKCA 1ZZ"
"WF", "986\d{2}"
"XK", "\d{5}"
"YT", "976\d{2}"
8
  • 4
    Just with a quick scan of the AU postcode-regex... this regex is very simple and will allow lots of false-positives through, so it's not exhaustive.
    – Taryn East
    Aug 27, 2014 at 7:49
  • 9
    The latest version of unicode CLDR containing the postal code regex is version 26.0.1. In later versions it has been removed because the data was not maintained and no other reliable sources could be found. Feb 18, 2016 at 12:15
  • 3
    Same, very basic for french Zip code regex. Use this one "^((0[1-9])|([1-8][0-9])|(9[0-8])|(2A)|(2B))[0-9]{3}$" -> developpez.net/forums/d518232/webmasters-developpement-web/…
    – Vincent D.
    Jun 13, 2016 at 18:39
  • I'm using i18napis.appspot.com/address/data/GB now; are there any problems with this service?
    – mgol
    Jul 11, 2016 at 13:34
  • 1
    Small correction to @kiko-software's comment: the latest version containing postal code data is 27.0.3.
    – Sietse
    Oct 27, 2016 at 9:29
149

There is none.

Postal/zip codes around the world don't follow a common pattern. In some countries they are made up by numbers, in others they can be combinations of numbers an letters, some can contain spaces, others dots, the number of characters can vary from two to at least six...

What you could do (theoretically) is create a seperate regex for every country in the world, not recommendable IMO. But you would still be missing on the validation part: Zip code 12345 may exist, but 12346 not, maybe 12344 doesn't exist either. How do you check for that with a regex?

You can't.

7
93

use these regx

$ZIPREG=array(
    "US"=>"^\d{5}([\-]?\d{4})?$",
    "UK"=>"^(GIR|[A-Z]\d[A-Z\d]??|[A-Z]{2}\d[A-Z\d]??)[ ]??(\d[A-Z]{2})$",
    "DE"=>"\b((?:0[1-46-9]\d{3})|(?:[1-357-9]\d{4})|(?:[4][0-24-9]\d{3})|(?:[6][013-9]\d{3}))\b",
    "CA"=>"^([ABCEGHJKLMNPRSTVXY]\d[ABCEGHJKLMNPRSTVWXYZ])\ {0,1}(\d[ABCEGHJKLMNPRSTVWXYZ]\d)$",
    "FR"=>"^(F-)?((2[A|B])|[0-9]{2})[0-9]{3}$",
    "IT"=>"^(V-|I-)?[0-9]{5}$",
    "AU"=>"^(0[289][0-9]{2})|([1345689][0-9]{3})|(2[0-8][0-9]{2})|(290[0-9])|(291[0-4])|(7[0-4][0-9]{2})|(7[8-9][0-9]{2})$",
    "NL"=>"^[1-9][0-9]{3}\s?([a-zA-Z]{2})?$",
    "ES"=>"^([1-9]{2}|[0-9][1-9]|[1-9][0-9])[0-9]{3}$",
    "DK"=>"^([D|d][K|k]( |-))?[1-9]{1}[0-9]{3}$",
    "SE"=>"^(s-|S-){0,1}[0-9]{3}\s?[0-9]{2}$",
    "BE"=>"^[1-9]{1}[0-9]{3}$",
    "IN"=>"^\d{6}$"
);
8
  • 7
    One of the better attempts I've seen to actually answer the OP. Get's slower as you ad more but a clean and clear approach.
    – Rob
    May 7, 2013 at 17:48
  • 5
    It does not get slower as you add more as Rob suggests as you would choose one of the regexes from the country code. Feb 26, 2014 at 19:30
  • 2
    I see you posted this in 2012. Got any more since?
    – rybo111
    May 19, 2014 at 9:06
  • @rybo111 check Chi answer. May 4, 2015 at 12:56
  • 6
    @ddunn801, there's a (whomping big) differencee between validating the pattern and authenticating the postal code. Authenticating the codes is whole orders of magnitude more difficult since (at least in the U.S.) postal codes are added and dropped regularly. In an ideal world, you would perform a quick-check to validate the pattern before submitting to a service (e.g., USPS) to validate the entire mailing address (services like this are paid, you'd hate to waste the value with bad data). Alas, the world is far from ideal.
    – JBH
    Oct 26, 2017 at 20:50
90
  1. Every postal code system uses only A-Z and/or 0-9 and sometimes space/dash

  2. Not every country uses postal codes (ex. Ireland outside of Dublin), but we'll ignore that here.

  3. The shortest postal code format is Sierra Leone with NN

  4. The longest is American Samoa with NNNNN-NNNNNN

  5. You should allow one space or dash.

  6. Should not begin or end with space or dash

This should cover the above:

(?i)^[a-z0-9][a-z0-9\- ]{0,10}[a-z0-9]$
10
  • 17
    This seems to be the only answer that provides a sanity check (which is probably what the OP wanted) rather than a full validation of every possibly combination. Exactly what I wanted thx
    – Lukos
    Apr 29, 2015 at 10:40
  • 2
    FYI, American Samoa is small enough to only has one postcode and it's 96799
    – naterkane
    May 17, 2018 at 19:17
  • 7
    In my opinion this is the only good answer. It can universally be used as pre-validation in HTML pattern attribute for instance.
    – Blackbam
    Nov 9, 2018 at 18:55
  • 2
    I think this is a good answer for the situation where one just wants to have a sanity check and not validate precisly per country. Just to have a little cleaner data without much effort -- in cases where full safety is needed, a third party plugin/service might be needed as others pointed out.
    – Yo Ludke
    Aug 23, 2019 at 9:14
  • 4
    For Javascript, remove the "(?i) as it does not conform to ECMA script. you can use this. ^[a-z0-9][a-z0-9\- ]{0,10}[a-z0-9]$ Dec 15, 2020 at 9:08
17

Trying to cover the whole world with one regular expression is not completely possible, and certainly not feasible or recommended.

Not to toot my own horn, but I've written some pretty thorough regular expressions which you may find helpful.

  • Canadian postal codes

    Basic validation:
    ^[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTVXY]{1}[0-9]{1}[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]{1}[ ]?[0-9]{1}[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]{1}[0-9]{1}$
    
    Extended validation:
    ^(A(0[ABCEGHJ-NPR]|1[ABCEGHK-NSV-Y]|2[ABHNV]|5[A]|8[A])|B(0[CEHJ-NPRSTVW]|1[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Y]|2[ABCEGHJNRSTV-Z]|3[ABEGHJ-NPRSTVZ]|4[ABCEGHNPRV]|5[A]|6[L]|9[A])|C(0[AB]|1[ABCEN])|E(1[ABCEGHJNVWX]|2[AEGHJ-NPRSV]|3[ABCELNVYZ]|4[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|5[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV]|6[ABCEGHJKL]|7[ABCEGHJ-NP]|8[ABCEGJ-NPRST]|9[ABCEGH])|G(0[ACEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|1[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Y]|2[ABCEGJ-N]|3[ABCEGHJ-NZ]|4[ARSTVWXZ]|5[ABCHJLMNRTVXYZ]|6[ABCEGHJKLPRSTVWXZ]|7[ABGHJKNPSTXYZ]|8[ABCEGHJ-NPTVWYZ]|9[ABCHNPRTX])|H(0[HM]|1[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|2[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|3[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|4[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|5[AB]|7[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Y]|8[NPRSTYZ]|9[ABCEGHJKPRSWX])|J(0[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|1[ACEGHJ-NRSTXZ]|2[ABCEGHJ-NRSTWXY]|3[ABEGHLMNPRTVXYZ]|4[BGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|5[ABCJ-MRTV-Z]|6[AEJKNRSTVWYXZ]|7[ABCEGHJ-NPRTV-Z]|8[ABCEGHLMNPRTVXYZ]|9[ABEHJLNTVXYZ])|K(0[ABCEGHJ-M]|1[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|2[ABCEGHJ-MPRSTVW]|4[ABCKMPR]|6[AHJKTV]|7[ACGHK-NPRSV]|8[ABHNPRV]|9[AHJKLV])|L(0[[ABCEGHJ-NPRS]]|1[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|2[AEGHJMNPRSTVW]|3[BCKMPRSTVXYZ]|4[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|5[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTVW]|6[ABCEGHJ-MPRSTV-Z]|7[ABCEGJ-NPRST]|8[EGHJ-NPRSTVW]|9[ABCGHK-NPRSTVWYZ])|M(1[BCEGHJ-NPRSTVWX]|2[HJ-NPR]|3[ABCHJ-N]|4[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Y]|5[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTVWX]|6[ABCEGHJ-NPRS]|7[AY]|8[V-Z]|9[ABCLMNPRVW])|N(0[ABCEGHJ-NPR]|1[ACEGHKLMPRST]|2[ABCEGHJ-NPRTVZ]|3[ABCEHLPRSTVWY]|4[BGKLNSTVWXZ]|5[ACHLPRV-Z]|6[ABCEGHJ-NP]|7[AGLMSTVWX]|8[AHMNPRSTV-Y]|9[ABCEGHJKVY])|P(0[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Y]|1[ABCHLP]|2[ABN]|3[ABCEGLNPY]|4[NPR]|5[AEN]|6[ABC]|7[ABCEGJKL]|8[NT]|9[AN])|R(0[ABCEGHJ-M]|1[ABN]|2[CEGHJ-NPRV-Y]|3[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Y]|4[AHJKL]|5[AGH]|6[MW]|7[ABCN]|8[AN]|9[A])|S(0[ACEGHJ-NP]|2[V]|3[N]|4[AHLNPRSTV-Z]|6[HJKVWX]|7[HJ-NPRSTVW]|9[AHVX])|T(0[ABCEGHJ-MPV]|1[ABCGHJ-MPRSV-Y]|2[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|3[ABCEGHJ-NPRZ]|4[ABCEGHJLNPRSTVX]|5[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|6[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTVWX]|7[AENPSVXYZ]|8[ABCEGHLNRSVWX]|9[ACEGHJKMNSVWX])|V(0[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTVWX]|1[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|2[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|3[ABCEGHJ-NRSTV-Y]|4[ABCEGK-NPRSTVWXZ]|5[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|6[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]|7[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Y]|8[ABCGJ-NPRSTV-Z]|9[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z])|X(0[ABCGX]|1[A])|Y(0[AB]|1[A]))[ ]?[0-9]{1}[ABCEGHJ-NPRSTV-Z]{1}[0-9]{1}$
    
  • US ZIP codes

    ^[0-9]{5}(-[0-9]{4})?$
    
  • UK post codes

    ^([A-PR-UWYZ]([0-9]{1,2}|([A-HK-Y][0-9]|[A-HK-Y][0-9]([0-9]|[ABEHMNPRV-Y]))|[0-9][A-HJKS-UW])\ [0-9][ABD-HJLNP-UW-Z]{2}|(GIR\ 0AA)|(SAN\ TA1)|(BFPO\ (C\/O\ )?[0-9]{1,4})|((ASCN|BBND|[BFS]IQQ|PCRN|STHL|TDCU|TKCA)\ 1ZZ))$
    

It is not possible to guarantee accuracy without actually mailing something to an address and having the person let you know when they receive it, but we can narrow things by down by eliminating cases that we know are bad.

2
  • The extended version for Canadian Postal Codes might have something wrong or missing, as it says that the following postal code is invalid: E3G 0A1, although it is a valid one.
    – fsschmitt
    Nov 25, 2015 at 22:51
  • I have validated against all 845,495 postal codes in Canada and this regex string has some fixes on the Extended validation to support all of these postal codes. Here is the new regex string for the extended validation on Canadian Postal Codes: pastebin.com/vazqFKy4
    – fsschmitt
    Nov 25, 2015 at 23:29
8

We use the following:

Canada

([A-Z]{1}[0-9]{1}){3}   //We raise to upper first

America

[0-9]{5}                //-or-
[0-9]{5}-[0-9]{4}       //10 digit zip

Other

Accept as is

3
  • 1
    I'd suggest adding an optional -[0-9]{4} to the US one. Some people do use their ZIP+4. Feb 23, 2009 at 20:01
  • 4
    /[0-9]{5}(?:-[0-9]{4})?/ lets you validate both styles from the US at the same time. May 11, 2009 at 20:51
  • 2
    @Chas.Owens adding ^ and $ ensure they can't type anything else before or after, like "12345aaa" ... /^[0-9]{5}(?:-[0-9]{4})?$/ Jun 13, 2013 at 14:55
8

If someone is still interested in how to validate zip codes I've found a solution:

Using Google Geocoding API we can check validity of ZIP code having both Country code and a ZIP code itself.

For example I live in Ukraine so I can check like this: https://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/geocode/json?components=postal_code:80380|country:UA

Or using JS API: https://developers.google.com/maps/documentation/javascript/geocoding#ComponentFiltering

Where 80380 is valid ZIP for Ukraine, actually every (#####) is valid.

Google returns ZERO_RESULTS status if nothing found. Or OK and a result if both are correct.

Hope this will be helpful.

1
  • The only issue would be the limit on the number of queries, which, depending on the site/size, could be an issue. Oct 23, 2015 at 17:42
7

Depending on your application, you might want to implement regex matching for the countries where most of your visitors originate and no validation for the rest (accept anything).

7

Please note that this is quite a hard problem, as stated by the accepted answer. I guess it didn't deter the folks at geonames.org though. They have a file a country info file, which doesn't fit whole into this answer - limit is at 30000 chars apparently. There are regexes for about 150 countries.

I extracted the bits relevant to this question here :

AD ^(?:AD)*(\d{3})$
AM ^(\d{6})$
AR ^([A-Z]\d{4}[A-Z]{3})$
AT ^(\d{4})$
AU ^(\d{4})$
AX ^(?:FI)*(\d{5})$
AZ ^(?:AZ)*(\d{4})$
BA ^(\d{5})$
BB ^(?:BB)*(\d{5})$
BD ^(\d{4})$
BE ^(\d{4})$
BG ^(\d{4})$
BH ^(\d{3}\d?)$
BM ^([A-Z]{2}\d{2})$
BN ^([A-Z]{2}\d{4})$
BR ^(\d{8})$
BY ^(\d{6})$
CA ^([ABCEGHJKLMNPRSTVXY]\d[ABCEGHJKLMNPRSTVWXYZ]) ?(\d[ABCEGHJKLMNPRSTVWXYZ]\d)$
CH ^(\d{4})$
CL ^(\d{7})$
CN ^(\d{6})$
CR ^(\d{4})$
CU ^(?:CP)*(\d{5})$
CV ^(\d{4})$
CX ^(\d{4})$
CY ^(\d{4})$
CZ ^(\d{5})$
DE ^(\d{5})$
DK ^(\d{4})$
DO ^(\d{5})$
DZ ^(\d{5})$
EC ^([a-zA-Z]\d{4}[a-zA-Z])$
EE ^(\d{5})$
EG ^(\d{5})$
ES ^(\d{5})$
ET ^(\d{4})$
FI ^(?:FI)*(\d{5})$
FM ^(\d{5})$
FO ^(?:FO)*(\d{3})$
FR ^(\d{5})$
GB ^(([A-Z]\d{2}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]\d{3}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]{2}\d{2}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]{2}\d{3}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]\d[A-Z]\d[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]{2}\d[A-Z]\d[A-Z]{2})|(GIR0AA))$
GE ^(\d{4})$
GF ^((97|98)3\d{2})$
GG ^(([A-Z]\d{2}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]\d{3}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]{2}\d{2}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]{2}\d{3}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]\d[A-Z]\d[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]{2}\d[A-Z]\d[A-Z]{2})|(GIR0AA))$
GL ^(\d{4})$
GP ^((97|98)\d{3})$
GR ^(\d{5})$
GT ^(\d{5})$
GU ^(969\d{2})$
GW ^(\d{4})$
HN ^([A-Z]{2}\d{4})$
HR ^(?:HR)*(\d{5})$
HT ^(?:HT)*(\d{4})$
HU ^(\d{4})$
ID ^(\d{5})$
IL ^(\d{5})$
IM ^(([A-Z]\d{2}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]\d{3}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]{2}\d{2}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]{2}\d{3}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]\d[A-Z]\d[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]{2}\d[A-Z]\d[A-Z]{2})|(GIR0AA))$
IN ^(\d{6})$
IQ ^(\d{5})$
IR ^(\d{10})$
IS ^(\d{3})$
IT ^(\d{5})$
JE ^(([A-Z]\d{2}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]\d{3}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]{2}\d{2}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]{2}\d{3}[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]\d[A-Z]\d[A-Z]{2})|([A-Z]{2}\d[A-Z]\d[A-Z]{2})|(GIR0AA))$
JO ^(\d{5})$
JP ^(\d{7})$
KE ^(\d{5})$
KG ^(\d{6})$
KH ^(\d{5})$
KP ^(\d{6})$
KR ^(?:SEOUL)*(\d{6})$
KW ^(\d{5})$
KZ ^(\d{6})$
LA ^(\d{5})$
LB ^(\d{4}(\d{4})?)$
LI ^(\d{4})$
LK ^(\d{5})$
LR ^(\d{4})$
LS ^(\d{3})$
LT ^(?:LT)*(\d{5})$
LU ^(\d{4})$
LV ^(?:LV)*(\d{4})$
MA ^(\d{5})$
MC ^(\d{5})$
MD ^(?:MD)*(\d{4})$
ME ^(\d{5})$
MG ^(\d{3})$
MK ^(\d{4})$
MM ^(\d{5})$
MN ^(\d{6})$
MQ ^(\d{5})$
MT ^([A-Z]{3}\d{2}\d?)$
MV ^(\d{5})$
MX ^(\d{5})$
MY ^(\d{5})$
MZ ^(\d{4})$
NC ^(\d{5})$
NE ^(\d{4})$
NF ^(\d{4})$
NG ^(\d{6})$
NI ^(\d{7})$
NL ^(\d{4}[A-Z]{2})$
NO ^(\d{4})$
NP ^(\d{5})$
NZ ^(\d{4})$
OM ^(\d{3})$
PF ^((97|98)7\d{2})$
PG ^(\d{3})$
PH ^(\d{4})$
PK ^(\d{5})$
PL ^(\d{5})$
PM ^(97500)$
PR ^(\d{9})$
PT ^(\d{7})$
PW ^(96940)$
PY ^(\d{4})$
RE ^((97|98)(4|7|8)\d{2})$
RO ^(\d{6})$
RS ^(\d{6})$
RU ^(\d{6})$
SA ^(\d{5})$
SD ^(\d{5})$
SE ^(?:SE)*(\d{5})$
SG ^(\d{6})$
SH ^(STHL1ZZ)$
SI ^(?:SI)*(\d{4})$
SK ^(\d{5})$
SM ^(4789\d)$
SN ^(\d{5})$
SO ^([A-Z]{2}\d{5})$
SV ^(?:CP)*(\d{4})$
SZ ^([A-Z]\d{3})$
TC ^(TKCA 1ZZ)$
TH ^(\d{5})$
TJ ^(\d{6})$
TM ^(\d{6})$
TN ^(\d{4})$
TR ^(\d{5})$
TW ^(\d{5})$
UA ^(\d{5})$
US ^\d{5}(-\d{4})?$
UY ^(\d{5})$
UZ ^(\d{6})$
VA ^(\d{5})$
VE ^(\d{4})$
VI ^\d{5}(-\d{4})?$
VN ^(\d{6})$
WF ^(986\d{2})$
YT ^(\d{5})$
ZA ^(\d{4})$
ZM ^(\d{5})$
CS ^(\d{5})$

Hopefully I didn't make any mistake, my regex-fu is pretty weak.

3
  • 1
    I would like to point out that the regex for France and Great Britain do not take into account possible spaces; In France, postal codes can be input with a space between the second and third digits (i.e. 75 001 instead of 75001). British post codes are quite often written with a space (i.e. SW1 1AA instead of SW11AA).
    – salcoin
    Oct 22, 2015 at 16:37
  • @salcoin Thanks for the input, I did not notice that (even though I am French). Looks like Chi's answer is better in this regard.
    – nha
    Oct 23, 2015 at 12:10
  • 1
    because str_replace a space with no space is super taxing right? :p Dec 15, 2016 at 10:08
5
.* 

Big Jump forgot about line breaks, blanks and control characters.

International postal codes are a kind of halting problem.

4

As others have pointed out, one regex to rule them all is unlikely. However, you can craft regular expressions for as many countries as you need using the address formatting info from the Universal Postal Union -- a little-known UN agency.

For example, here are the address formatting rules, including postal code, for a handful of countries (PDF format):

2

The problem is going to be that you probably have no good means of keeping up with the changing postal code requirements of countries on the other side of the globe and which you share no common languages. Unless you have a large enough budget to track this, you are almost certainly better off giving the responsibility of validating addresses to google or yahoo.

Both companies provide address lookup facuilities through a programmable API.

2

Given that there are so many edge cases for each country (eg. London addresses may use a slightly different format to the rest of the UK) I don't think that there is an ultimate regex other than maybe:

[0-9a-zA-Z]+

Best of going with a fairly broad pattern (well not quite as broad as the above), or treat each country/region with a specific pattern of its own!

UPDATE: However, it may be possible to dynamically construct a regex based upon lots of smaller, region specific rules - not sure about performance though!

Lots of country specific patterns can be found on the RegExLib site.

0
1

Why are you doing this and why do you care? As Tom Ritter pointed out, it doesn't matter whether you even have a ZIP/postal code at all, much less whether it's valid or not, until and unless you are actually going to be sending something to that address. Even if you expect that you will be sending them something someday, that doesn't mean you need a postal code today.

2
  • Yeah but if they're going to be entering one, might as well make sure it's correct at that point. However, I agree with one of the other answers that basically says, make it validate for the countries that you think will be the majority of your customers.
    – cdmckay
    Feb 23, 2009 at 19:12
  • 1
    Some credit clearing houses will not accept a bill unless the zip is correct. I would rather validate the zip on input, rather than submit the charge and have it rejected.
    – SamGoody
    Jan 24, 2012 at 9:50
1

As noted elsewhere the variation around the world is huge. And even if something that matches the pattern does not mean it exists.

Then, of course, there are many places where postcodes are not used (e.g. much or Ireland).

1
  • Actually, probably all of Ireland, as I don't think D1, D2, etc. are considered proper post codes as you can't identify an address using just this code and a street number.
    – Dónal
    May 11, 2009 at 20:44
1

There are reasons beyond shipping for having an accurate postal code. Travel agencies doing tours that cross borders (Eurozone excepted of course) need this information ahead of time to give to the authorities. Often this information is entered by an agent that may or may not be familiar with such things. ANY method that can cut down on mistakes is a Good Idea™

However, writing a regex that would cover all postal codes in the world would be insane.

1
  • 1
    It is only a good idea until the code starts rejecting valid zipcodes either because it is buggy or the zipcodes have changed. Validation is something that must either be right or not there at all. At the very least there should be an override option. May 11, 2009 at 20:49
1

Somebody was asking about list of formatting mailing addresses, and I think this is what he was looking for...

Frank's Compulsive Guide to Postal Addresses: http://www.columbia.edu/~fdc/postal/ Doesn't help much with street-level issues, however.

My work uses a couple of tools to assist with this: - Lexis-Nexis services, including NCOA lookups (you'll get address standardization for "free") - "Melissa Data" http://www.melissadata.com

1

This is a very simple RegEx for validating US Zipcode (not ZipCode Plus Four):

(?!([089])\1{4})\d{5}

Seems all five digit numeric are valid zipcodes except 00000, 88888 & 99999.

I have tested this RegEx with http://regexpal.com/

SP

1
  • This RegEx does not enforce four digits for the zip+4 portion. E.g. it considers "92122-1" a valid zip code. Mar 24, 2020 at 1:03
0

If Zip Code allows characters and digits (alphanumeric), below regex would be used where it matches, 5 or 9 or 10 alphanumeric characters with one hypen (-):

^([0-9A-Za-z]{5}|[0-9A-Za-z]{9}|(([0-9a-zA-Z]{5}-){1}[0-9a-zA-Z]{4}))$
0

I know this is an old quesiton, but I stumbled across the same problem. I have invoices from over 100 countries and am trying to get the correkt creditor over the zip (if every other check is failing). So what I did is writing a short Python Script, that creates a pattern from a string:

class RegexPatternBuilder:
    """
    Builds a regex pattern out of a given string(i.e. --> HM452 AX2155 : [A-Z]{2}\d{3}\s{1}[A-Z]{2}\d{4})
    """
    __is_alpha_count = 0
    __is_numeric_count = 0
    __is_whitespace_count = 0
    __pattern = ""

    # Count: wich character of the string we're locking at right now
    __count = 0

    # Countrys like  Andora starts theire ZIP with the country abbreviation :AD500
    # So check at first if the ZIP starts with the abbreviation and if so, add it to the pattern and increase the count.
    def __init__(self, zip_string, country):
        self.__zip_string = zip_string
        self.__country = country
        if self.__zip_string.startswith(country):
            self.__pattern = f'({self.__country})'
            self.__count += len(self.__country)

    def build_regex(self):
        # Last step ;
        # Add the current alpha_numeric pattern with count
        if len(self.__zip_string) == self.__count:
            if self.__is_alpha_count:
                self.__pattern += f"[A-Z]{{{self.__is_alpha_count}}}"
            if self.__is_numeric_count:
                self.__pattern += f"\d{{{self.__is_numeric_count}}}"
            return f'{self.__pattern}\\b'

        # Case: Whitespace
        # Check if there is a crossing from numeric / alphanumeric to whitespace,
        # if so --> add the alpha_numeric regex to the whole pattern with the
        # count as the number of viable appeaerances.
        # Since there is max 1 whitespace in a ZIP, add the whitespace regex immediately.
        # Every other case is similar to that.
        if self.__zip_string[self.__count].isspace():
            if self.__is_numeric_count:
                self.__pattern += f"\d{{{self.__is_numeric_count}}}"
            if self.__is_alpha_count:
                self.__pattern += f"[A-Z]{{{self.__is_alpha_count}}}"
            self.__pattern += "\s{1}"
            self.__is_whitespace_count += 1
            self.__is_alpha_count = 0
            self.__is_numeric_count = 0

        # Case: Is Alphanumeric
        if self.__zip_string[self.__count].isalpha():
            if self.__is_numeric_count:
                self.__pattern += f"[0-9]{{{self.__is_numeric_count}}}"
            self.__is_whitespace_count = 0
            self.__is_alpha_count += 1
            self.__is_numeric_count = 0

        # Case: Is Numeric
        if self.__zip_string[self.__count].isnumeric():
            if self.__is_alpha_count:
                self.__pattern += f"[A-Z]{{{self.__is_alpha_count}}}"
            self.__is_whitespace_count = 0
            self.__is_alpha_count = 0
            self.__is_numeric_count += 1

        # Case: Special Character (i.e. - )
        # No escaping or count for this so far, because it shouldn't be needed for our zip purposes
        if not self.__zip_string[self.__count].isalpha() \
                and not self.__zip_string[self.__count].isnumeric() \
                and not self.__zip_string[self.__count].isspace():
            self.__pattern += f'{self.__zip_string[self.__count]}{{1}}'
        self.__count += 1
        return self.build_regex()

With that I created all the different possible regexes for all zips (by country) we have historically and wrote them back into a db table (i.e. something like this in the end: COUNTRY:RE PATTERN:(\d{5})\b [what ever country this might be ;D])

Maybe it helps someone.

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