This is the case if you can prove/believe that you will receive a sufficiently large quantity of mail (from 2,000 letters/postcards up every day), then it is called big-customer-PLZ. In this case, only the house delivery remains, alternatively you can also apply for a mailbox (then you have another zip code).
If only 10% of all residents in Germany (and the total number of around 80 million) were to have their own postal code, then the current value range for (currently 5-digit) postal codes would be broken up and the value range would have to be extended from 00000-99999 to 0000000-9999999. And in January 1993 it was already complicated enough to expand from 4-digit to 5-digit!
In other words, postal codes for individual households or even individual persons make no sense!
With one or another company, it makes sense, due to its size, to have a separate zip code – but probably just there!
must get enough mail to stand in a very special place (on a mountain or something (because the Zugspitze has its own zip code)) or be a special building (Federal Day has its own zip code).
So the "simplest" is probably somewhere away from the shot to living.
This is the case if you can prove/believe that you will receive a sufficiently large quantity of mail (from 2,000 letters/postcards up every day), then it is called big-customer-PLZ. In this case, only the house delivery remains, alternatively you can also apply for a mailbox (then you have another zip code).
Not at all!
Imagine the following:
If only 10% of all residents in Germany (and the total number of around 80 million) were to have their own postal code, then the current value range for (currently 5-digit) postal codes would be broken up and the value range would have to be extended from 00000-99999 to 0000000-9999999. And in January 1993 it was already complicated enough to expand from 4-digit to 5-digit!
In other words, postal codes for individual households or even individual persons make no sense!
With one or another company, it makes sense, due to its size, to have a separate zip code – but probably just there!
Hey,
must get enough mail to stand in a very special place (on a mountain or something (because the Zugspitze has its own zip code)) or be a special building (Federal Day has its own zip code).
So the "simplest" is probably somewhere away from the shot to living.
About Anna
You can't ask for them. You will automatically get your own large-receiver PLZ if you receive a few thousand shipments every day
Not at all.
As a company, authority or the like with a very large inbox, you get your own large-receiver postal code from Deutsche Post, otherwise not.
It won't work. At best, the big company can.