address formats

World Cup 2026 Group G Showdown: Postal Codes & Goal Posts


Belgium, Egypt, Iran and New Zealand may share a World Cup group, but they certainly don’t share the same address playbook. One country packs box numbers and multilingual street names into tidy European lines, another layers neighborhoods and governorates, another runs on locality-first logic and ultra-long postal codes, and another mixes street delivery with road delivery and PO Box variations depending on where the mail needs to go. Let’s kick off Group G with real-world address examples from melissa.com:

 🇧🇪Belgium Example:  


Why it’s different:
Belgium likes its addresses neat, but not necessarily simple. A standard line can include building, floor, room, street number and a box number before the 4-digit postal code and locality. Also the same address might appear in Dutch, French or German depending on the region. The example alone gives you “Gebouw”, “Verdieping”, “Kamer” and “bus” in one neat package, which is a good reminder that Belgian precision comes with a multilingual twist.

 🇪🇬Egypt Example:  


Why it’s different:
Egypt’s format does more layering than it first appears to. A single address can move from street to neighborhood to city to governorate before landing on a 5-digit postal code, with PO Boxes still very much in play. In the example, “Rue Ahmed Orabi” gets paired with “Al-Mohandessine” and “Giza”, showing how the locality stack helps narrow things down in a country where urban density and regional scale make every extra detail count.

 🇮🇷Iran Example:  


Why it’s different:
Iran flips the usual Western rhythm and makes locality do a lot of the early work. The example starts with “Tehran city” and “Tehranpars", then moves into the street and building details before ending with a 10-digit postal code. That means the address is about getting the neighborhood, street, province and code all lined up in the correct order, often across both Persian and Latin-script versions.

 🇳🇿New Zealand Example: 

Example of standardized New Zealand postal addresses:

Address Example Post Office Box:

Why it’s different:
New Zealand gives you two valid routes to the same destination: a standard thoroughfare format for street delivery and a separate PO Box format when the mail goes through the post office. The street example packs in shop, level, building, street number, suburb, city and 4-digit postcode, while the PO Box version swaps that out for a totally different routing flow. Add in road delivery numbers, Private Bags and Māori naming conventions, and suddenly New Zealand’s clean-looking format has more flexibility than you might expect.

Group G makes one thing clear: there is no universal address formula. Belgium relies on compact, structured lines, Egypt adds layers of regional context, Iran follows a locality-first approach, and New Zealand changes format depending on how and where mail is delivered. Get one element wrong, and even a seemingly accurate address can turn delivery into a costly guessing game.

That’s exactly why Melissa.com's address verification is the ultimate team player — validating formats, fixing errors and ensuring global deliveries hit the back of the net every time. Perfect for e-commerce, logistics, fan engagement campaigns or sending World Cup swag across borders! ⚽📦

Which Group G address quirk surprises you most? Visit melissa.com/global-address-formatting-examples to see them all.

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