Address On A Letter Format | Mail That Lands Right

A clean, standard address block with the right line order and readable spacing helps your letter sort faster and reach the right door.

Addressing a letter sounds simple until it bounces back, shows up late, or lands at the wrong place. Most delivery problems come from tiny layout slips: a missing apartment line, a cramped ZIP line, a nickname where a legal name is needed, or a return address that blends into the stamp area.

This article gives you a clear, repeatable format you can use for personal mail, business mail, and international letters. You’ll see ready-to-copy templates, placement tips for envelopes, and a quick way to self-check before you drop it in the box.

What goes where on an envelope

Think of the front of an envelope as three zones. Keep each zone tidy and separated, so nothing competes for attention.

Return address zone

Place your return address in the top-left area. Keep it smaller than the delivery address. Two to four lines is normal. If you’re using a printed label, don’t let it drift toward the middle.

Delivery address zone

Place the recipient’s address near the center. This is the block that sorting machines and carriers rely on. Use a readable font or neat hand printing, and keep the lines left-aligned.

Postage zone

Place the stamp in the top-right. Leave clean space around it. Don’t put a return address line, logo, or sticker right next to the stamp area.

Address on a letter format for U.S. mail

Use this line order for most U.S. letters. Keep punctuation simple. Don’t squeeze lines together. A little breathing room helps readability.

Standard U.S. delivery address template

Line 1: Recipient’s full name

Line 2: Street number + street name + street type

Line 3: Unit line (Apt, Unit, Ste) if needed

Line 4: City, state abbreviation, ZIP Code

Copy-ready example

Jordan Lee

1250 West Pine Street

Apt 4B

Springfield, IL 62704

If you want the official standard that large mailers follow, the USPS lays out line structure, abbreviations, and placement rules in USPS Publication 28 Postal Addressing Standards.

Return address template

Line 1: Your name

Line 2: Street number + street name

Line 3: Unit line if needed

Line 4: City, state, ZIP Code

Keep the return address in the top-left. If your letter can’t be delivered, this block is what brings it back to you.

Names, attention lines, and “care of” lines that don’t cause delays

The name line does more than feel polite. It can affect whether the letter gets accepted at a front desk, mailroom, dorm office, or shared household.

Using an attention line

If you’re writing to a business, add an attention line when the mail needs to reach a specific person.

Business example with attention line

Greenfield Dental Clinic

Attn: Billing Department

820 Market Street

Suite 300

San Diego, CA 92101

Using “c/o” (care of)

Use “c/o” when the recipient receives mail at someone else’s address.

Care of example

Samira Khan

c/o Ayesha Rahman

44 Lakeview Drive

Albany, NY 12207

Put the recipient first, then the “c/o” line. That order tells the carrier who the letter is meant for, and whose mailbox it will be placed in.

Address formats for apartments, dorms, and PO boxes

Most returned letters happen because a secondary line is missing. If there’s an apartment, unit, building, floor, dorm hall, or mailbox number, put it on its own line or at the end of the street line if it fits cleanly.

Apartments and units

Use the unit designator that matches how the building is labeled: Apt, Unit, Ste, or a building number. Keep it consistent with what the recipient uses on bills and official mail.

Apartment example

Maria Gomez

9900 Parkside Avenue

Unit 12

Miami, FL 33172

Dorms and campus mail

Many campuses route mail through a central room. Use the student’s name as the first line, then the residence hall and room, then the campus street address if the school provides one.

Dorm-style example

Devon Price

Hawthorne Hall, Room 214

100 College Avenue

Madison, WI 53706

PO boxes

When using a PO box, keep it as the delivery line. Don’t add a street address unless the recipient gave you a specific “street addressing” format for that box.

PO box example

River City Bookshop

PO Box 418

Boise, ID 83701

International letters that clear customs and reach the right country

International mail works best when you follow the destination country’s line order, then add the country name on the last line in English. Keep the country line in clear lettering.

If you’re posting to the UK, Royal Mail shares practical layout rules that match what their sorting expects, including keeping the postcode clear on the last lines. Their help page on Royal Mail clear addressing tips is a solid reference when you’re formatting UK addresses.

Simple international template (works for many destinations)

Line 1: Recipient’s name

Line 2: Building/house number + street

Line 3: City or town

Line 4: State/region + postal code (as used locally)

Line 5: COUNTRY NAME

International example (format only)

Priya Sen

12 Orchard Road

Central District

Hong Kong

HONG KONG

When you’re unsure about the region line or postal code, ask the recipient to copy the address exactly as it appears on their local mail. Don’t rewrite it into your own style.

Readability rules that help machines and humans

Even when your line order is correct, the way it looks can make or break delivery speed. Use these readability habits:

  • Use left-aligned lines. Centered addresses look nice, yet they can slow scanning.
  • Use consistent letter size if handwriting. Print, don’t use cursive for the address block.
  • Leave a blank margin around the address block. Avoid doodles, stamps, or stickers near it.
  • Keep the delivery address larger than the return address.
  • Use dark ink on a light envelope. Light ink and glossy envelopes can reduce contrast.

If your envelope has a window, position the paper so the full address shows without cutting off the ZIP/postcode line.

Full checklist of address elements and where they belong

Use this table when you’re building an address from scratch, cleaning up an address someone texted you, or fixing a letter that already bounced back.

Address element Where it goes Notes that prevent mix-ups
Recipient name Top line of delivery block Use the name the person uses on mail and accounts
Business name Above street line Put the business first when the mailroom sorts by company
Attention line Second line (below business) Use “Attn:” then the team or person
Care of line Second line (below recipient) Use “c/o” then the host name
Street number + street name Main street line Keep directional words with the street name
Unit / apartment / suite Own line or end of street line If it’s long, put it on its own line for clarity
City Last line (before state/ZIP) Spell it the way locals do, not a nickname
State / province / region Last line Use the standard abbreviation when one is used locally
ZIP / postal code End of last line Double-check digits; one wrong digit can redirect the route
Country name Last line for international Write in English, in clear lettering

Where to place the address on different envelope sizes

Most personal letters use a #10 envelope, A7 greeting envelope, or a small C6-style envelope. The idea stays the same: keep the delivery block centered in the largest clear area.

#10 business envelope (common in the U.S.)

  • Return address: top-left, three to four lines
  • Delivery address: center area, roughly midway down
  • Stamp: top-right corner

Small greeting envelopes

  • Write slightly smaller, yet keep spacing between lines
  • Keep the delivery block away from curved edges
  • Skip decorative stickers near the address

Large flat envelopes

  • Use a printed label if your handwriting shrinks
  • Keep the delivery address on the same side as the stamp
  • Don’t place the address across seams or folds

Common address mistakes and quick fixes

When a letter goes missing, the cause is often predictable. Use this table as a final pass before sealing the envelope.

Slip-up What it can cause Fast fix
Missing unit or apartment number Carrier can’t place it in the right box Add the unit line under the street line
ZIP/postcode digits swapped Letter routes to the wrong area Recheck against the recipient’s saved address
Return address placed near the stamp Sorting reads the wrong block Move return address to the top-left
Address block centered like a wedding invite Scanning may slow or fail Left-align the lines in the delivery block
Extra notes inside the address block Carrier confusion Move notes to the letter inside, not the envelope
Using faint ink or pencil Low contrast during sorting Use dark pen or print a label
Country name missing on international mail Item stays in the wrong mail stream Add the country line in English

Two copy-ready layouts you can reuse

These layouts work well when you want a simple pattern you can follow every time.

Personal letter layout

Return address (top-left)

Your Name

Your Street Address

Your City, ST ZIP

Delivery address (center)

Recipient Name

Street Address

Unit line (if any)

City, ST ZIP

Business letter layout

Return address (top-left)

Your Name or Business Name

Street Address

City, ST ZIP

Delivery address (center)

Business Name

Attn: Person or Team

Street Address

Suite/Unit line (if any)

City, ST ZIP

Last pass before you seal it

Do this quick check. It takes ten seconds and saves days of back-and-forth.

  1. Read the delivery address from top to bottom. Does each line add new info?
  2. Check the unit line. If the building uses one, is it present?
  3. Check the last line. City + state/region + ZIP/postcode are correct and readable.
  4. Check placement. Return address is top-left, stamp is top-right, delivery block is centered.
  5. Check ink contrast. Dark writing on a light envelope.

If you’re sending something time-sensitive, write the address first, then stamp it, then seal it. That order reduces smudges and missed lines.

References & Sources