List of postcode areas in the United Kingdom

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For the purposes of directing mail, the United Kingdom is divided by the Royal Mail into a number of postcode areas. The postcode area is the largest geographical unit used and forms the initial characters of the alphanumeric UK postcode.[1]


Contents

[edit] Subdivision

Each postcode area is further divided into post towns and postcode districts.[1] There are on average 20 postcode districts to a postcode area.[1] Within the London postal district the LONDON post town is instead divided into several postcode areas.[2]

[edit] Scope

The one or two letters chosen for the postcode areas are generally intended as a mnemonic for the places they serve.[1] The postcode areas, post towns and postcode districts do not follow parish, district, county or national boundaries and usually serve much larger areas than the placenames they are associated with For example the PA postcode area has PA1 and PA78 140 miles apart.

For example, the postcode areas which comprise the London postal district cover only 40% of Greater London.[2] The remainder of its area is covered by parts or all of twelve adjoining postcode areas (EN, IG, RM, DA, BR, TN, CR, SM, KT, TW, HA and UB).[2]

[edit] United Kingdom postcode areas

Postcode area Postcode area name Code formation
AB Aberdeen
AL St Albans
B Birmingham
BA Bath
BB Blackburn
BD Bradford
BH Bournemouth
BL Bolton
BN Brighton
BR Bromley
BS Bristol
BT Belfast (All N.I. Codes start with BT)
CA Carlisle
CB Cambridge
CF Cardiff
CH Chester
CM Chelmsford
CO Colchester
CR Croydon
CT Canterbury
CV Coventry
CW Crewe
DA Dartford
DD Dundee
DE Derby
DG Dumfries[1] Dumfries and Galloway
DH Durham
DL Darlington
DN Doncaster
DT Dorchester
DY Dudley
E London E
EC London EC
EH Edinburgh
EN Enfield
EX Exeter
FK Falkirk
FY Blackpool[1] Fylde
G Glasgow
GL Gloucester
GU Guildford
HA Harrow
HD Huddersfield
HG Harrogate
HP Hemel Hempstead
HR Hereford
HS Outer Hebrides[1]
HU Hull
HX Halifax
IG Ilford[1]
IP Ipswich
IV Inverness
KA Kilmarnock
KT Kingston upon Thames
KW Kirkwall
KY Kirkcaldy
L Liverpool
LA Lancaster
LD Llandrindod Wells[1]
LE Leicester
LL Llandudno
LN Lincoln
LS Leeds
LU Luton
M Manchester
ME Rochester[1] Medway
MK Milton Keynes
ML Motherwell
N London N
NE Newcastle upon Tyne
NG Nottingham
NN Northampton
NP Newport
NR Norwich
NW London NW
OL Oldham
OX Oxford
PA Paisley
PE Peterborough
PH Perth
PL Plymouth
PO Portsmouth
PR Preston
RG Reading
RH Redhill
RM Romford
S Sheffield
SA Swansea
SE London SE
SG Stevenage
SK Stockport
SL Slough
SM Sutton[1]
SN Swindon
SO Southampton
SP Salisbury[1]
SR Sunderland
SS Southend on Sea
ST Stoke-on-Trent
SW London SW
SY Shrewsbury
TA Taunton
TD Selkirk Tweeddale
TDCU 1ZZ Tristan Da Cunha Dependency of Saint Helena
TF Telford
TN Royal Tunbridge Wells[1]
TQ Torquay
TR Truro
TS Cleveland[1] Teesside
TW Twickenham
UB Southall[1] Uxbridge
W London W
WA Warrington
WC London WC
WD Watford
WF Wakefield
WN Wigan
WR Worcester
WS Walsall
WV Wolverhampton
YO York
ZE Lerwick[1] Zetland

[edit] Crown dependencies

The Crown dependencies (which are not part of the United Kingdom) did not introduce postcodes until later, but use a similar coding scheme. They are separate postal authorities.[1]

Postcode area Postcode area name
GY Guernsey
JE Jersey
IM Isle of Man

[edit] Defunct postcode areas

[edit] London NE and S

[edit] Glasgow

Glasgow, like London, was divided into compass districts: C, W, NW, N, E, SE, S, SW. When postcodes were introduced, these were mapped into the new G postcode: C1 became G1, W1 became G11, N1 became G21, E1 became G31, S1 became G41, SW1 became G51, and so on. As NW and SE had never been subdivided they became G20 and G40 respectively.

[edit] Dublin

Dublin was split into Dublin postal districts by the Post Office in 1917 at the same time as other major cities in the UK like Liverpool and Manchester. After the creation of the Irish Free State (later the Republic of Ireland) the Irish government did not adopt postcodes; however, the Dublin postal districts remain to this day and the correct form of address is Dublin 7, etc. The postcode area D has not been re-used within the UK.

[edit] Norwich and Croydon

Norwich and Croydon were used for a postcode experiment in the late 1960s, which was replaced by the current system. The format was of the form NOR or CRO followed by two numbers and a letter, eg NOR 07A.

[edit] Non-Geographic Postcodes

Additionally the non-geographic postcode area BX has been introduced. This postcode area is used by a number of organisations, including H M Revenue and Customs and Lloyds TSB.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Royal Mail - Address Management Guide, (2004)
  2. ^ a b c HMSO, The Inner London Letter Post, (1980)

[edit] External links

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