How ZIP Code Boundaries Cross State Lines
A handful of ZIP codes span two states, creating legal and administrative complications. Here are the edge cases.
## Cross-State ZIP Codes
While rare, some ZIP codes cross state boundaries. This happens when a post office serves addresses in two states and the USPS assigns a single ZIP to the entire delivery area.
## Known Cross-State ZIPs
| ZIP | Primary State | Secondary State | Location |
|-----|--------------|----------------|----------|
| 42223 | Kentucky | Tennessee | Fort Campbell |
| 51023 | Iowa | South Dakota | Elk Point area |
| 63673 | Missouri | Illinois | Ste. Genevieve area |
| 71749 | Arkansas | Louisiana | Junction City area |
| 86515 | Arizona | New Mexico | Navajo Nation |
| 81137 | Colorado | New Mexico | Southern Ute area |
## Why Cross-State ZIPs Exist
The USPS optimizes for delivery efficiency, not political boundaries. Cross-state ZIPs occur when:
- A **military installation** spans state lines (Fort Campbell straddles KY/TN)
- A **Native American reservation** crosses state borders
- A small community across the state line is closer to the post office in the neighboring state
- River boundaries make delivery from the "correct" state impractical
## Legal Complications
Cross-state ZIPs create real problems:
- **Sales tax** — Which state's tax applies? (Answer: the state where the delivery address is physically located)
- **Income tax** — Residents may file in one state but their ZIP indicates another
- **Voter registration** — Must register in the state of physical residence
- **Insurance** — Rates are set by state; ZIP-based lookups may return wrong state
- **Data analysis** — ZIP-to-state lookups may assign residents to the wrong state
## The Census Bureau's Solution
The Census Bureau handles cross-state ZIPs by splitting the ZCTA at the state boundary. Each resulting piece gets its own demographic data, even though they share a ZIP code. This means the same 5-digit code may appear in two state-level Census data files.
## Handling in Data Systems
Best practices for cross-state ZIPs:
- Never assume ZIP → state is a 1:1 relationship
- Use full address geocoding when state determination matters
- Maintain a lookup table of known cross-state ZIPs
- Validate state assignment against the physical address, not the ZIP
Key Terms
Related Tools
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ZIP Code ValidatorCheck if a ZIP code is valid and currently in use. Supports US ZIP codes and international postal codes.
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