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Product Description
The postal code (French: code postal) consists of five digits, the first two digits being the number of the département in metropolitan France where the post office in charge of delivery to a town is located. The system is also used outside Europe, in the Overseas Departments and Territories, but it is the first three digits that identify the département or territory. The digits 00 are used for Military addresses. The digits 20 are used for all of Corsica; Corsica used to be one département numbered 20, but today it is split into two départements numbered as 2A and 2B.
The next three digits identify the local postal office in charge of mail delivery. A regular postcode always ends with a 0, with the notable exception of Paris, Lyon and Marseille - see below - and the Overseas Départements and Territories. Postcodes not ending with a 0 may indicate a special code, known as CEDEX (see below), or newest postcodes.
The next three digits identify the local postal office in charge of mail delivery. A regular postcode always ends with a 0, with the notable exception of Paris, Lyon and Marseille - see below - and the Overseas Départements and Territories. Postcodes not ending with a 0 may indicate a special code, known as CEDEX (see below), or newest postcodes.
Additional Information
| Unique Records | 39,069 |
| Ending Postal Code | 73450 |
| Starting Postal Code | 10103 |
| Fields Included | City, Latitude, Longitude, Postal Code, State, Suburb |
| Formats Included | CSV, DOC, Microsoft Access, Microsoft Excel, PDF, RTF, SQL, XML |
| Updated Every | 3 months |
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