Posted on 22 July 2008 by joost
Postcodes
What could be more boring than a postcode? Well, few things actually. But that’s not the point. The point is that Nederlandse postcodes are typical in that they are unusual and highly precise. A postcode basically tells you which block the recipient lives in.
Here is how they work. You have four numbers plus two letters: 1234AB. The numbers specify the city, and the letters specify the street. They are hierarchical: positions on the right-hand side specify a location with more precision.
An example. Take Typically.nl’s postcode 1007EB. 1xxx stands for Amsterdam, so that one is easy. Postcodes in Amsterdam below 1010 typically are routed to PO Boxes. The 7 specifies the (postal) district the box is in. The letters finally determine which branch.
Amsterdam has 1000, and you would perhaps expect the next-biggest city Rotterdam to have 2000 but nope; that’s Haarlem, a smaller city near Amsterdam. Rotterdam has 3000 and actually you can’t really determine size of a city by postcode. The complete list is on Wikipedia so knock yourself out.
How to address someone in Nederland then?
- Name (either initials + last name or first name + last name)
- Company name (optional)
- Address
- Postcode + City
The postcode is usually written 1234 AB, i.e. with a space between the numbers and the letters. But 1234AB is fine also. They are quite essential to the postcode though, so don’t leave them out. And no, the letters don’t stand for the province.
Our privatized mail company has a page where you can look up postcodes to addresses or vice versa.
