Addresses
This guidance is for government teams that build online services. To find information and services for the public, go to GOV.UK.
Help users provide an address using one of the following:
- Multiple text inputs
- Address lookup
- Textarea
Multiple text inputs
<fieldset class="govuk-fieldset">
<legend class="govuk-fieldset__legend govuk-fieldset__legend--l">
<h1 class="govuk-fieldset__heading">
What is your address?
</h1>
</legend>
<div class="govuk-form-group">
<label class="govuk-label" for="address-line-1">
Address line 1
</label>
<input class="govuk-input" id="address-line-1" name="addressLine1" type="text" autocomplete="address-line1">
</div>
<div class="govuk-form-group">
<label class="govuk-label" for="address-line-2">
Address line 2 (optional)
</label>
<input class="govuk-input" id="address-line-2" name="addressLine2" type="text" autocomplete="address-line2">
</div>
<div class="govuk-form-group">
<label class="govuk-label" for="address-town">
Town or city
</label>
<input class="govuk-input govuk-!-width-two-thirds" id="address-town" name="addressTown" type="text" autocomplete="address-level2">
</div>
<div class="govuk-form-group">
<label class="govuk-label" for="address-county">
County (optional)
</label>
<input class="govuk-input govuk-!-width-two-thirds" id="address-county" name="addressCounty" type="text">
</div>
<div class="govuk-form-group">
<label class="govuk-label" for="address-postcode">
Postcode
</label>
<input class="govuk-input govuk-input--width-10" id="address-postcode" name="addressPostcode" type="text" autocomplete="postal-code">
</div>
</fieldset>
{% from "govuk/components/input/macro.njk" import govukInput %}
{% from "govuk/components/fieldset/macro.njk" import govukFieldset %}
{% call govukFieldset({
legend: {
text: "What is your address?",
classes: "govuk-fieldset__legend--l",
isPageHeading: true
}
}) %}
{{ govukInput({
label: {
text: "Address line 1"
},
id: "address-line-1",
name: "addressLine1",
autocomplete: "address-line1"
}) }}
{{ govukInput({
label: {
text: "Address line 2 (optional)"
},
id: "address-line-2",
name: "addressLine2",
autocomplete: "address-line2"
}) }}
{{ govukInput({
label: {
text: "Town or city"
},
classes: "govuk-!-width-two-thirds",
id: "address-town",
name: "addressTown",
autocomplete: "address-level2"
}) }}
{{ govukInput({
label: {
text: "County (optional)"
},
classes: "govuk-!-width-two-thirds",
id: "address-county",
name: "addressCounty"
}) }}
{{ govukInput({
label: {
text: "Postcode"
},
classes: "govuk-input--width-10",
id: "address-postcode",
name: "addressPostcode",
autocomplete: "postal-code"
}) }}
{% endcall %}
When to use multiple text inputs
Only use multiple text inputs when you know which countries the addresses will come from and can find a format that supports them all. This can be difficult to know if you’re asking for addresses outside of the UK.
Using multiple text inputs means:
- you can easily extract and use specific parts of an address
- you can give help for individual text inputs
- you can validate each part of the address separately
- users can complete the form using their browser’s autocomplete function
The disadvantages of using multiple text inputs are that:
- it’s hard to find a single format that works for all addresses
- there’s no guarantee that users will use the text inputs the way you think they will
- users cannot easily paste addresses from their clipboards
How multiple text inputs work
If you use multiple text inputs, you should:
- only make individual text inputs mandatory if you really need the information
- make the text inputs the appropriate length for the content – it helps people understand the form, for example, make postcode text inputs shorter than street text inputs
- let users enter postcodes in different formats
Make sure there are enough text inputs to accommodate longer addresses if you know your users will need them. For example, allow users to include a company name or flat number.
Make it optional for users to enter their county (such as Berkshire or Cumbria). It’s not part of a correct UK address, according to Royal Mail, and it’s not used to deliver post.
Remove the county field if you’re sure your users will not need it, and your service will not use it.
Use the autocomplete attribute on multiple address fields
Use the autocomplete
attribute on each individual address field to help users enter their address more quickly. This lets you specify each input’s purpose so browsers can autofill the information on a user’s behalf if they’ve entered it previously.
Check which input purpose to use for each field.
In production, you’ll need to do this to meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA. You will not normally need to use the autocomplete
attribute in prototypes, as users will not generally be using their own devices.
Error messages
Error messages should be styled like this:
<fieldset class="govuk-fieldset">
<legend class="govuk-fieldset__legend govuk-fieldset__legend--l">
<h1 class="govuk-fieldset__heading">
What is your address?
</h1>
</legend>
<div class="govuk-form-group govuk-form-group--error">
<label class="govuk-label" for="address-line-1">
Address line 1
</label>
<p id="address-line-1-error" class="govuk-error-message">
<span class="govuk-visually-hidden">Error:</span> Enter address line 1
</p>
<input class="govuk-input govuk-input--error" id="address-line-1" name="addressLine1" type="text" aria-describedby="address-line-1-error" autocomplete="address-line1">
</div>
<div class="govuk-form-group">
<label class="govuk-label" for="address-line-2">
Address line 2 (optional)
</label>
<input class="govuk-input" id="address-line-2" name="addressLine2" type="text" autocomplete="address-line2">
</div>
<div class="govuk-form-group govuk-form-group--error">
<label class="govuk-label" for="address-town">
Town or city
</label>
<p id="address-town-error" class="govuk-error-message">
<span class="govuk-visually-hidden">Error:</span> Enter town or city
</p>
<input class="govuk-input govuk-!-width-two-thirds govuk-input--error" id="address-town" name="addressTown" type="text" aria-describedby="address-town-error" autocomplete="address-level2">
</div>
<div class="govuk-form-group">
<label class="govuk-label" for="address-county">
County (optional)
</label>
<input class="govuk-input govuk-!-width-two-thirds" id="address-county" name="addressCounty" type="text">
</div>
<div class="govuk-form-group govuk-form-group--error">
<label class="govuk-label" for="address-postcode">
Postcode
</label>
<p id="address-postcode-error" class="govuk-error-message">
<span class="govuk-visually-hidden">Error:</span> Enter postcode
</p>
<input class="govuk-input govuk-input--width-10 govuk-input--error" id="address-postcode" name="addressPostcode" type="text" aria-describedby="address-postcode-error" autocomplete="postal-code">
</div>
</fieldset>
{% from "govuk/components/input/macro.njk" import govukInput %}
{% from "govuk/components/fieldset/macro.njk" import govukFieldset %}
{% call govukFieldset({
legend: {
text: "What is your address?",
classes: "govuk-fieldset__legend--l",
isPageHeading: true
}
}) %}
{{ govukInput({
label: {
text: 'Address line 1'
},
id: "address-line-1",
name: "addressLine1",
errorMessage: {
text: "Enter address line 1"
},
autocomplete: "address-line1"
}) }}
{{ govukInput({
label: {
text: 'Address line 2 (optional)'
},
id: "address-line-2",
name: "addressLine2",
autocomplete: "address-line2"
}) }}
{{ govukInput({
label: {
text: "Town or city"
},
classes: "govuk-!-width-two-thirds",
id: "address-town",
name: "addressTown",
errorMessage: {
text: "Enter town or city"
},
autocomplete: "address-level2"
}) }}
{{ govukInput({
label: {
text: "County (optional)"
},
classes: "govuk-!-width-two-thirds",
id: "address-county",
name: "addressCounty"
}) }}
{{ govukInput({
label: {
text: "Postcode"
},
classes: "govuk-input--width-10",
id: "address-postcode",
name: "addressPostcode",
errorMessage: {
text: "Enter postcode"
},
autocomplete: "postal-code"
}) }}
{% endcall %}
If a postcode entered is not a real postcode, use a message like this:
<div class="govuk-form-group govuk-form-group--error">
<label class="govuk-label" for="address-postcode">
Postcode
</label>
<p id="address-postcode-error" class="govuk-error-message">
<span class="govuk-visually-hidden">Error:</span> Enter a real postcode
</p>
<input class="govuk-input govuk-input--width-10 govuk-input--error" id="address-postcode" name="addressPostcode" type="text" value="Not a postcode" aria-describedby="address-postcode-error" autocomplete="postal-code">
</div>
{% from "govuk/components/input/macro.njk" import govukInput %}
{{ govukInput({
label: {
text: "Postcode"
},
classes: "govuk-input--width-10",
id: "address-postcode",
name: "addressPostcode",
value: "Not a postcode",
errorMessage: {
text: "Enter a real postcode"
},
autocomplete: "postal-code"
}) }}
Make sure errors follow the guidance in error message and have specific error messages for specific error states.
Address lookup
An address lookup helps users find a full address from partial information such as a postcode.
When to use an address lookup
Use an address lookup when you’re asking users for a UK address.
When not to use an address lookup
Address lookups generally only work for UK addresses. Use a manual option such as multiple text inputs or a textarea when you are collecting mostly or only international addresses
How an address lookup works
An address lookup lets users specify a UK address by entering their postcode and selecting their address from a list. There is also an option to enter a street name or number.
When using an address lookup, you should:
- make it clear that it will only work for UK addresses
- provide a manual option for people with international addresses or addresses that are missing or not properly listed in the address lookup
- let people enter their postcodes in upper or lower case and with or without spaces
Allow different postcode formats
It’s easier for users if you accept and ignore unwanted characters. This is better than rejecting the input and telling the user they have not provided a valid postcode.
You should let users enter postcodes that contain:
- upper and lower case letters
- no spaces
- additional spaces at the beginning, middle or end
- punctuation like hyphens, brackets, dashes and full stops
Textarea
<div class="govuk-form-group">
<label class="govuk-label" for="address">
What is your address?
</label>
<textarea class="govuk-textarea" id="address" name="address" rows="5" autocomplete="street-address"></textarea>
</div>
{% from "govuk/components/textarea/macro.njk" import govukTextarea %}
{{ govukTextarea({
name: "address",
id: "address",
autocomplete: "street-address",
label: {
text: "What is your address?"
}
}) }}
When to use textarea
Use a textarea if you expect a broad range of address formats and you do not need to format the address for print or use specific sub-parts of the address (for example, street or postcode).
When not to use textarea
You should not use a textarea if you:
- need to separate an address into accurate sub-parts (for example, street or postcode)
- need to help users look up an address
How a textarea works
Textareas let users enter an address in any format and make it easy to copy and paste addresses from their clipboard.
Use the autocomplete attribute on a textarea
Use the autocomplete
attribute on the textarea component when you’re asking for an address. This lets browsers autofill the information on a user’s behalf if they’ve entered it previously.
To do this, set the autocomplete
attribute to street-address
as shown in the HTML and Nunjucks tabs in the textarea example above.
If you are working in production you’ll need to do this to meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA.
You will not normally need to use the autocomplete
attribute in prototypes, as users will not generally be using their own devices.
Help improve this pattern
To help make sure that this page is useful, relevant and up to date, you can:
- take part in the ‘Addresses’ discussion on GitHub and share your research
- propose a change – read more about how to propose changes in GitHub
Tell us if your service uses this pattern
Take part in our usage survey (opens in a new tab) to help us improve this pattern to better meet the needs of the services that use it.
Need help?
If you’ve got a question about the GOV.UK Design System, contact the team.