How Other Countries Invented Postal Codes
Germany in 1941, the UK in 1959, the US in 1963 — the parallel invention of postal codes tells a story of modernization.
## A Global Timeline
Postal codes were invented independently by multiple countries over three decades, driven by the same forces: growing mail volume, urbanization, and the need for machine sorting.
## Timeline of Introduction
| Year | Country | Format | Name |
|------|---------|--------|------|
| 1932 | Ukraine (USSR) | Numeric | Postal index |
| 1941 | Germany | 2 digits | Postleitzahl (PLZ) |
| 1958 | Argentina | 4 digits | Código Postal |
| 1959 | United Kingdom | Alphanumeric | Postcode |
| 1963 | United States | 5 digits | ZIP Code |
| 1965 | Switzerland | 4 digits | NPA |
| 1968 | Japan | 3 digits → 7 | Yūbin bangō |
| 1971 | Canada | 6 chars | Postal Code |
| 1972 | India | 6 digits | PIN Code |
| 1993 | Germany (unified) | 5 digits | PLZ |
| 2015 | Ireland | 7 chars | Eircode |
## The Wartime Origin
Germany's 1941 postal code was born of necessity: wartime mail volume surged, and postal workers were drafted into military service. The 2-digit system reduced the expertise needed to route mail correctly.
## The British Experiment
The UK's Royal Mail began experimenting with postcodes in Norwich in 1959, expanded to Croydon in 1966, and completed nationwide coverage by 1974. The alphanumeric format was chosen to provide more precision without requiring long numeric sequences.
## Common Drivers
Every country that adopted postal codes was responding to similar challenges:
- **Mail volume growth** — Urbanization multiplied delivery points
- **Labor shortages** — Experienced postal workers were scarce
- **Machine sorting** — Automation required standardized codes
- **Delivery speed** — Public expected faster delivery
## Different Design Philosophies
| Approach | Countries | Philosophy |
|----------|-----------|------------|
| Short numeric | US, Germany, Japan | Easy to remember, machine-sort |
| Alphanumeric | UK, Canada, Ireland | More combinations in fewer chars |
| Per-address | Ireland (Eircode) | Unique ID for every building |
| Hierarchical | India, Japan | Region → district → office |
## Holdouts
Some countries still operate without postal codes. Hong Kong relies on district-based routing, and several small island nations in the Pacific have no system at all. As e-commerce grows globally, pressure to adopt codes is increasing.