Navigating Your US Address Change: Free Tips & Checklists

We provide free, step-by-step guides, checklists, and tips to make your move seamless. This is a free resource to help with postal service and change of adress, not a paid service.

Changing your address involves more than just forwarding mail. It means updating critical government agencies, financial institutions, the us postal service and personal services. Forgetting a key step can lead to missed tax documents, a lapsed driver’s license, or security risks. This guide provides all the information you need in one place, for free. Our goal is to help you stay organized and ensure a smooth transition for both your adress change and postal mail forwarding.

Your Complete U.S. Address Change Guide

How to Officially File Your Address Change

Filing an official change of address with the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) is the first and most important step. Here’s the general process

Gather Your Information

You’ll need your old and new addresses, a valid email address, and a credit/debit card. The card is used for a small (approx. $1.10) identity verification fee—this ensures that you are the one authorizing the change.

Select Your Address Change Type

You must specify if this is a **Permanent** move or a **Temporary** one. You will also select if the move is for an **Individual**, a **Family** (all names at the same address), or a **Business**.

Choose Your Filing Method

The fastest and most common method is filing online at the official USPS.com website. You can also visit any U.S. Post Office in person and request Form 3575, the “Change of Address” form.

Look for Confirmation

If you file online, you will receive a confirmation email from USPS almost immediately. A physical confirmation letter will also be mailed to *both* your old and new addresses within 5-7 business days as a final security measure.

Our Mission

Our goal is to help you understand the address change process, avoid missed mail from the US postal service, and receive all your important documents.

Our goal is to help you understand the address change process, avoid missed mail, and ensure all your important documents

Permanent vs. Temporary: What to File

You can file your address change online through the official USPS website or by visiting your local post office.

Permanent Change of Address

This is the standard option if you are moving for good. The USPS will forward your mail (piece by piece, not in batches) for 12 months. This 12-month period gives you plenty of time to update all your important contacts directly.

Temporary Change of Address

This is ideal if you are a student, on a long-term work assignment, or a “snowbird” (15 days to 1 year). The USPS will forward all your mail to your temporary address for the duration you set. On the end date, mail service automatically resumes at your permanent address.

Who Do You Need to Notify?

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