113 - The Postcode Map of the United Kingdom
You should take a look at a website called www.motorwaymap.co.uk for an elaborate diagram of Great Britain’s motorways, along the lines of post #75 on this blog, showing a streamlined diagram of the Eisenhower Interstate System reminiscent of subway maps. The UK motorway map is a bit too big to show here in great detail, but an equally interesting map on that site represents a ‘boxed’ view of the UK, visually demonstrating the UK postal area codes. Many thanks to Gerald Higgins, the creator of the motorway map, the postal code map (and other interesting ones) for pointing them out to me.
Postal codes in the UK are called ‘postcodes’, and were introduced from 1959 to 1974. Most big cities already had postcodes – London was first divided into 10 postal districts in 1857-’58 and subdivisions were numbered in 1917 (e.g. W1, SE2, etc.) London still retains this system, while pre-existing city postal areas elsewhere were incorporated into the new system.
Outside the London Postal Area, UK postcodes have an identical format, generally consisting of two sets of characters separated by a space:
the out code, two to four characters long and always starting with one or two letters, the area part. This is followed by the district part: either one number, two numbers or a number and a letter.
the in code, always three characters long, always one number, the sector part. This is followed by two letters, the unit part.
The out code is used to send the mail to the destination sorting office, where the in code is used to sort the mail into delivery rounds.
This code is a hierarchical system, the first letter(s) denoting the largest area, the rest of the characters steadily defining the exact location of the address – be it a street, part of a street or even a single building.
There are 124 postal areas, 3.064 postal districts, 11.598 postal sectors and 1.780.000 postal units in the UK. And some 27 million individual addresses.
The letter(s) in the out code give some clue to the geographical location of the address, with one notable exception: SAN TA1 is the postcode for correctly addressed letters to Father Christmas. Some other interesting specific postcodes in London: SW1A 0AA (House of Commons), SW1A 1AA (Buckingham Palace), SW1A 2AA (10, Downing Street, Prime Minister’s Office).
The Channel Islands and the Isle of Man adopted postcodes only in the early 1990s, following the UK format: JE (Jersey), GY (Guernsey) and IM (Isle of Man). IM is sometimes replaced by EV (Ellan Vannin, the island’s name in its native Manx language).
Other British overseas territories have separate postcodes, often to eliminate confusion. ASCN 1ZZ is used for Ascension Island, as previously mail for the island often ended up in Ascuncion, Paraguay. Similarly, STHL 1ZZ prevents mail for Saint Helena in the South Atlantic from going to St Helen’s in Merseyside.


Canada Post’s postal code for Santa is H0H 0H0, which (following Canada’s numbering scheme of A on the east coast and Z on the west) would place the North Pole in Quebec somewhere around Montreal.
Comment by fweebles — May 16, 2007 @
The archipelago of Tristan da Cunha was assigned a UK postcode (TDCU 1ZZ) in 2005.
Comment by ned — May 16, 2007 @
Belfast, the Isle of Man, Jersey, and Guernsey are not in Great Britain.
Comment by ben — May 16, 2007 @
@ ben:
You are right. Most people use UK and GB interchangeably, as I have done here. The official name of the state is ‘United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland’, indicating that GB consists of England, Scotland and Wales only. Man and the Channel Islands are dependencies of the British Crown, but not parts of the UK.
I’ll re-title the post from ‘The Postcode Map of GB’ to ‘(…) UK’, although that makes it only slightly more accurate: Northern Ireland isn’t in GB but is in UK, yet Man and the Channel Islands, figured on the map, aren’t in either. And ‘The Postcode Map of the United Kingdom, Man and the Channel Islands’ strikes me as too long.
Comment by strangemaps — May 16, 2007 @
[...] 113 - The Postcode Map of the United Kingdom [image] You should take a look at a website called http://www.motorwaymap.co.uk for an elaborate diagram of Great Britain’s […] [...]
Pingback by Top Posts « WordPress.com — May 17, 2007 @
I always address mail to my Scottish friends in the “Republic of Scotland”. One day.
Comment by ben — May 17, 2007 @
I have great respect for your work. Just remember that.
Comment by Your biggest fan! — May 17, 2007 @
There’s a further breakdown of London postcodes by district -see http://www.milesfaster.co.uk/postcodes/post-map.htm - outside the E1, W1, SE1 etc areas which are the closest to the City of London the numerical identifier is generally based on an alphabetical ordering of the postal areas in the E, W, SE etc districts. There are a couple of anomalous goups, such as SE20 and SE21 onwards where a second alphabetical ordering starts. This means that the map, without this information, has an apparently illogically random sprinkling of numbers across each district.
In the days before the Internet it took us a day with a big map of London and a Post Office directory to work this out after a discussion in a pub on the ordering of postcodes…
Comment by passing thru — May 17, 2007 @
In the United States, mail to Santa Claus is directed to North Pole, Alaska, 99705.
Comment by Sartorius — May 17, 2007 @
very cool.
great blog.
Comment by DeputyDog — May 18, 2007 @
waving to you from CT18
Comment by snowqueen — May 18, 2007 @
I’ve never been able to work it out, this is very informative. But there are a couple of things about London post codes that don’t make sense. There is N1, E1 and W1 however there is no S1
SW2 borders SW16, which borders SW19, SW16 also borders CR1 (understandable)
Further North, Long Eaton has a Derbyshire postal code, but a Nottinghmashire dialing code…
Comment by nergalicious — May 19, 2007 @
nergalicicious: South of the river was unbearably provincial ie part of Surrey (note where Surrey Docks are, and Kingston for that matter). Thus they came late to the party and just got SE and SW.
We just never got organised in this country with postcodes and number plates and county numbers and phone codes, unlike the French.
This blog ought to be part of the National Curriculum
Comment by lordhutton — May 20, 2007 @
What does the yellow and green colour-coding represent?
Comment by Andre Engels — May 21, 2007 @
The yellow and green colour-coding doesn’t represent anything important - it was just to illustrate what you could do with this type of spreadsheet-produced map.
It’s actually based on the alphabet - A-M and N-Z, but you could just as easily make it depend on some dataset that you have that uses postcodes.
Comment by Gerald Higgins — May 22, 2007 @
There’s a great map showing London Post Code disposition, with the added bonus of info on average rent, designed I think for students looking for accomodation:
http://housing.london.ac.uk/cms/area-guide/postcode-map.html
Comment by secretagentarthur — May 22, 2007 @
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Pingback by Cool Maps » Nestoria Blog — May 25, 2007 @
It’s nice to know there are other postcode obsessives out there!
Comment by Duchess — June 8, 2007 @
[...] Maps—Marginal Revolution linked to this unusual blog, which is something of a timesink. But the Postcode Map of the United Kingdom might prove [...]
Pingback by Today’s top links at First Drafts - The Prospect magazine blog — June 12, 2007 @
When I send cheques to my bank, I have to use the postcode BX1 1TL. It’s actually in Andover …
Comment by Chosulman — June 14, 2007 @
It looks like Dudley and Worcester are the wrong way round.
Comment by bobba — June 25, 2007 @
Remember folks, the Postcode system was designed by Royal Mail as a coding system for mail routing. It is not designed to match geographical boundaries closely. Your postcode contains instructions on the best distribution centre / delivery office for your address. That is why some parts of Norfolk have a Peterborough Postcode, large chunks of Wales have a Shrewsbury Postcode etc.
Sometimes the Royal Mail changes or recodes Postcodes, so yours could change (although they give plenty of notice) - that’s when things get fun, as people can be very posessive and guarded of their postcode, often for the snobbery value!
Comment by Duke — June 29, 2007 @
[...] more use, in many ways, are the maps which combine abstractions and the real world. The British map of Postal Codes is a highly abstracted map that still gives real value for a specific purpose. Perhaps less [...]
Pingback by View from the Edge » Blog Archive » The world through Strange Maps — June 30, 2007 @
Nice… now what would be the populations and areas of these regions ;) That would be interesting…
Comment by Ad Enegry — July 13, 2007 @
pls give me the postcode for united kingdom
Comment by tony richards — August 29, 2007 @
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Pingback by links for 2007-12-14 « Simply… A User — December 14, 2007 @
Search UK Postal Code (PostCode) of Place & City names in UK (Zip code, Postcode). Postal Code
Comment by postal codes — December 27, 2007 @
Please send me full postcode list of all cities and places in UK
Comment by Led Zeppelin — January 13, 2008 @
To answer snowqueen, there IS an S postcode (and indeed for that matter, an NE postcodes, the other missing Main compass point). It’s in Sheffield, some 160miles away.
View Larger Map
Comment by Lewis — April 22, 2008 @