Postal addresses in Taiwan
Postal addresses in Taiwan (Republic of China) use the East Asian addressing system. When written in Chinese, addresses start from the largest administrative unit and continue to the smallest, although in English the order is often reversed.
Format
Addresses start with a postal code, followed by administrative divisions in the following order:
- Municipality (市 shì) or county (縣 xiàn)
- City district (區 qū), urban township (鎮 zhèn) or rural township (鄉 xiāng)
- Urban village (里 lǐ) or rural village (村 cūn)
- Neighborhood (鄰 lín)
Villages and neighborhoods are optional. Next is the street address, also in order from larger to smaller:
- Road (路 lù) or street (街 jiē)
- Section (段 duàn), for longer roads
- Lane (巷 xiàng)
- Alley (弄 lòng)
- House number (號 hào)
- Floor (樓 lóu)
- Apartment (之 zhi)。(之 can also be a nearby independent house.)
House numbers are generally in geographic order with odd and even numbers on opposite sides of the street. However, numbering resets when a new road section starts, so that #295, Sec. 1 may be followed by #1, Sec. 2. It is also not uncommon for new numbers to be inserted, resulting in #5, #5-1, #7, etc.
Examples
The address of the Jinshan office of Chunghwa Post,[1] which is located directly on a main street in Taipei, is written in Chinese as:
10603 台北市大安區 金山南路2段55號
Reversing the order, the English address
References
no 116, jiajhan rd,chieh tien village, zihguan township,kaohsiung county