Question:

I want know ZIP/Postal Code london city?

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I want know ZIP/Postal Code london city?

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  1. its either starts with a N,W,E,S


  2. The financial district, around the area known as Bank where most of the older financial institutions are located, is in postal zone EC1

  3. Well there are loadssssssssss

    But the basic division is N,E,S,W for North, East, South, West

    Within that there are more divisions e.g NW- North West

    And then after the letters there are numbers which differ. eg NW10

  4. Where is London city?

    There is an airport of that name, but not a place.

  5. W1A 1AA

  6. City of London postal codes would include EC1, EC2, EC3, EC4.  

    Some parts of WC1, SE1 or possibly E1 if it is right on the edge but then it is not really City of London anymore.

    Try the Royal Mail website.  They have a postcode finder, if you know the address, it will give you the postcode.

  7. The City of London is postcode EC1.

    This is where the Bank of England is.

  8. Use Royal Mail's website to find London postal codes.

  9. http://www.royalmail.com/portal/rm

    Our company uses this site for finding all postcodes

  10. Which part? It's a big place - there must be nearly a hundred.

    Best advice I can think of is use the Post Office website - they have a good postcode finder.

    Hope this helps!

  11. google it

  12. if you know the rest of the address you can look up the post code on the royal mail website

  13. The simple answer:

    use Royal Mail's online postcode finder

    http://postcode.royalmail.com/portal/rm/...

  14. Postcodes in the uk are split into many areas, in london you first have the 4 way split, North, East, South, West, denoted by the first letter of directions, so N, E, S, W, then you can have East and West added to that, giving you N, NE, E, SE, S, SW, W, NW, then the center of London has Central Zones, once you have them, these are further split up to 26 further times giving you the first set of code, so for example SE26, would relate to South East post zone 26, there is then a gap and you come onto the second code set, up to two numbers follwed by two letters, these denote road area and group of houses, so for example 1 could be the first 10 odd numbered houses, 2 could be the first 10 even numbered and so on, all this combined means there are about 200 postal zones follwed by anything up to 99x26x26 road / house designations (or 66,924) so making a maximum of approx 13,384,800 postcodes in the greater london area.

    SO I am sorry to say that unless you know the specific address of where you want to send something the likelyhood of finding the correct Postcode is poor.

    Hope this helps.

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