The 2026 FIFA World Cup is here — the biggest, most global edition yet with 48 teams, three host nations, and fans shipping merch, tickets, and fan mail across every continent. While the teams battle it out on the pitch, something far less predictable is happening off it: addresses.
One missing “Col.” in Mexico, an overlooked suburb in South Africa, or an ignored post-2011 road-name detail in South Korea can send a package (or a marketing campaign) completely off course. These aren’t random quirks — they’re shaped by centuries of history, colonial legacies, urban density and modernization efforts. And they create very real challenges for e-commerce stores, logistics partners, sponsors and marketers trying to reach passionate fans worldwide.
That’s exactly why Melissa.com’s global address verification exists. We help businesses validate, correct, standardize and enrich addresses in 250 countries — so your World Cup campaigns, merch drops, ticket deliveries and CRM data actually land where they’re supposed to.
Why Addresses Vary So Dramatically Around the World
Address formats aren’t universal. They reflect culture, geography and history:
These differences directly impact business results:
Melissa.com solves this with parsing, validation against official postal data, standardization, transliteration (e.g., Korean ↔ Latin), autocomplete and enrichment — all with easy integrations into Shopify, Salesforce, Dynamics, Azure and more.
Explore Every Group’s Address Showdown
We’ve broken down real-world address examples for every team in all 12 groups. Each dedicated post follows the same fun, detailed format as our Group A breakdown (real examples, “Why it’s different” explanations and business takeaways). Click through (available starting the listed date below) to see how history and geography collide — and why Melissa.com is the ultimate assist for global deliverability.
Group A: Mexico, South Africa, South Korea, Czechia Host Mexico brings essential colonias and Apartado Postal PO Boxes. South Africa layers building details with suburbs. South Korea showcases its modern road-name revolution. Czechia keeps centuries-old dual house numbers alive. These formats create hidden friction for anyone shipping merch or maintaining clean fan CRM data. → Read the full Group A Address Showdown on June 11
Group B: Canada, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Qatar, Switzerland Canada’s alphanumeric postal codes and bilingual needs meet modern Gulf zone systems in Qatar and precise European formatting in Switzerland and Bosnia. Cross-border flows with U.S. hosts make verification essential for reliable shipping and CRM hygiene. → Read the full Group B Address Showdown on June 12
Group C: Brazil, Morocco, Haiti, Scotland Brazil’s detailed CEP + bairro system reflects continental scale. Morocco and Haiti add North African and Caribbean administrative layers. Scotland brings classic UK thoroughfare precision. Ideal reading for brands targeting passionate South American and African fan bases. → Read the full Group C Address Showdown on June 13
Group D: United States, Paraguay, Australia, Türkiye The U.S. co-host uses familiar ZIP+4 and state formats, while Paraguay, Australia, and Türkiye bring their own colonial, continental, and Eurasian twists. A must-read for North American e-com and logistics teams handling international orders. → Read the full Group D Address Showdown on June 14
Group E: Germany, Curaçao, Côte d’Ivoire, Ecuador Germany’s strict, efficient 5-digit PLZ + hausnummer system contrasts with Caribbean and West/East African formats. These differences highlight why verification protects deliverability for diverse global audiences. → Read the full Group E Address Showdown on June 15
Group F: Netherlands, Japan, Sweden, Tunisia Japan’s ultra-detailed chome/ban-go + kanji system and the Netherlands’ precise European style show how density and history shape formats. Sweden and Tunisia add Nordic and North African flavors. → Read the full Group F Address Showdown on June 16
Group G: Belgium, Egypt, Iran, New Zealand Belgium’s multilingual European precision meets Egypt’s and Iran’s Middle Eastern/North African conventions and New Zealand’s clean Oceanic style. → Read the full Group G Address Showdown on June 17
Group H: Spain, Cabo Verde, Saudi Arabia, Uruguay Spain’s historic European system pairs with Cabo Verde’s island nuances, Saudi Arabia’s modern planned-city zones and Uruguay’s South American approach. → Read the full Group H Address Showdown on June 18
Group I: France, Senegal, Iraq, Norway France’s detailed European formatting contrasts with Senegal’s West African, Iraq’s Middle Eastern and Norway’s Nordic styles. → Read the full Group I Address Showdown on June 19
Group J: Argentina, Algeria, Austria, Jordan Argentina’s partido + CP system, Algeria’s North African layers, Austria’s precise European style and Jordan’s Middle Eastern conventions. → Read the full Group J Address Showdown June 20
Group K: Portugal, DR Congo, Uzbekistan, Colombia Portugal’s Apartado system, DR Congo’s African administrative details, Uzbekistan’s Central Asian format, and Colombia’s South American style. → Read the full Group K Address Showdown on June 21
Group L: England, Croatia, Ghana, Panama England’s classic UK format, Croatia’s post-Yugoslav European style, Ghana’s West African approach and Panama’s Central American conventions. → Read the full Group L Address Showdown on June 22
Score with Accurate Addresses This World Cup
Whether you’re selling official merch, delivering tickets, running fan-engagement campaigns or managing sponsor data, clean global addresses are your secret weapon. Melissa.com turns address chaos into reliable, deliverable data — improving conversions, reducing costs and protecting your brand during the biggest sporting event on Earth.
Ready to see how it works with real addresses like the ones above? Start your free trial or request a personalized demo at melissa.com. Explore hundreds more real-world examples: melissa.com/global-address-formatting-examples