Need a believable American address without doxxing anyone? Our random address generator builds full United States addresses with realistic street names, cities, states, and ZIP codes that follow real postal patterns. Use the results to fill out test forms, populate dummy databases, draft realistic fiction, prototype checkout flows, or set up tutorial screenshots. Every address is generated on the fly so nothing points to a real resident, and you can refresh as many times as you need until the format fits your project.
Real addresses are messy, private, and risky to copy from public records. A random address generator gives developers, writers, and designers a shortcut to data that looks real without exposing anyone. The street numbers, city names, state codes, and ZIP ranges all follow United States conventions, so they pass casual inspection by a form, a reviewer, or a reader without any awkward red flags.
What a complete US address contains
Every address from the generator includes a street number, a street name with a directional or suffix when appropriate, an optional apartment or suite, a city, a two-letter state abbreviation, and a five or nine digit ZIP code. The combinations match real postal formatting rules, including common street types like Avenue, Boulevard, Lane, Court, and Parkway, plus regional flavors that vary between coasts.
Coverage across the country
The generator pulls from cities and towns spread across all fifty states, so you can find an address in a quiet Vermont village, a Phoenix suburb, a downtown Chicago neighborhood, or a coastal Oregon town with one click. ZIP codes are matched to plausible state ranges, which keeps results consistent with how the United States Postal Service actually allocates them.
Common ways people use these addresses
Developers use generated addresses to seed test databases, run end to end checkout tests, and stress test address validation libraries without leaking customer data. QA teams drop them into staging environments to confirm shipping calculators behave the same in Maine as they do in Hawaii. Writers use them to ground a scene in a specific neighborhood, and designers use them to fill mockups with text that does not look like obvious filler.
Important: do not use them for real mail
These addresses are not real. Sending physical mail, packages, or sensitive documents to a generated address can land on a real person who has nothing to do with your project. Treat the results as sample data only. Use them in code, copy, and concept work; never on a label, contract, or government form. With that boundary in mind, the generator becomes a quiet productivity tool you will reach for again and again.
Using Random Addresses
When you need placeholder addresses, think:
Which country or regional format do you require?
Do you need street type like Avenue, Road, or Boulevard?
Should it include postal codes or ZIP codes?
Will city and state align with the region?
Is anonymity or realism more important?
Address Generator FAQs
Guide to generating realistic addresses:
How are addresses generated?
By combining street numbers, names, cities, and postal codes following regional conventions.
Can I specify country or format?
Not currently; regenerate until you see an address in your desired regional style.
Are these real addresses?
No-they’re fictional but follow authentic formatting to appear realistic for testing or storytelling.
How many can I generate?
Unlimited-click as often as you need placeholder addresses.
How do I copy or save?
Click the address to copy it instantly, or click the heart icon to add it to your favorites list.
What are good United States addresses?
There's thousands of random United States addresses in this generator. Here are some samples to start:
99733 White Motorway, Apt. 158, 21130, Kaneborough, Connecticut, United States
474 Zieme Mews, Apt. 705, 60901-3423, Bergnaumland, Louisiana, United States
3223 Luettgen Glen, Apt. 497, 57783-5376, Lake Leonardobury, Colorado, United States
36400 Rhiannon Field, Suite 641, 18361-4514, Hildegardchester, Washington, United States
43468 Yost Square, Apt. 649, 22385, South Jeffryland, South Carolina, United States
031 Lucienne Alley, Apt. 875, 99637, South Gabriella, Georgia, United States
42160 Dickens Overpass, Apt. 443, 28859, Immanuelmouth, Arizona, United States
46115 Francisca Garden, Apt. 806, 76602, Lake Lloyd, Utah, United States
8064 Smith Curve, Apt. 930, 58614-0343, Adamborough, Connecticut, United States
10393 Barton Mountains, Apt. 895, 50228, Port Isabelle, Utah, United States
About the creator
All idea generators and writing tools on The Story Shack are carefully crafted by storyteller and developer Martin Hooijmans. During the day I work on tech solutions. In my free hours I love diving into stories, be it reading, writing, gaming, roleplaying, you name it, I probably enjoy it. The Story Shack is my way of giving back to the global storytelling community. It's a huge creative outlet where I love bringing my ideas to life. Thanks for coming by, and if you enjoyed this tool, make sure you check out a few more!
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