How USPS Sorts Mail by ZIP Code
Follow a letter from mailbox to doorstep and see how optical scanners, barcodes, and sorting machines use ZIP codes at every step.
## The Journey of a Letter
When you drop a letter in a mailbox, it travels through a sophisticated network of processing facilities before reaching its destination. ZIP codes guide it at every step.
## Step 1: Collection and Facing
Collected mail arrives at a local post office, where a **facer-canceler machine** orients letters face-up and cancels the stamp. Letters are then fed into optical character readers.
## Step 2: Automated Sorting
The USPS operates three types of mail processing equipment:
| Machine | Function | Speed |
|---------|----------|-------|
| AFCS (Advanced Facer Canceler System) | Orient and cancel | 30,000/hour |
| DBCS (Delivery Barcode Sorter) | Sort by barcode | 36,000/hour |
| FSS (Flat Sequencing System) | Sort large flats | 14,000/hour |
OCR cameras read the destination address and match it against the USPS address database. If the address is recognized, the machine sprays an Intelligent Mail Barcode (IMb) on the envelope.
## Step 3: Network Distribution
Sorted mail flows through a hierarchy of facilities:
1. **Origin post office** — Initial collection
2. **Area Distribution Center (ADC)** — Regional hub, sorts by first 3 digits
3. **Network Distribution Center (NDC)** — Cross-country routing
4. **Sectional Center Facility (SCF)** — Sorts by full 5-digit ZIP
5. **Destination Delivery Unit (DDU)** — Local post office for carrier routes
## Step 4: Carrier Route Sorting
At the destination post office, the DBCS sorts letters into carrier route order — called **walk sequence** — so the letter carrier can deliver them in order along their route. This final sort uses the full 11-digit delivery point code.
## Why Speed Matters
The USPS processes roughly **318 million pieces of mail per day**. Without automated ZIP code sorting, this volume would be impossible. Each letter typically passes through 2-3 sorting machines before reaching its destination, with the entire journey taking 1-5 business days depending on distance.