The postal code for the country of Pakistan is "PAKISTAN"
Only two countries use ZIP Codes: the United States and the Philippines. Many other countries have postal codes that use other names (postcodes, PIN Codes, etc.). Some countries do not use postal codes at all.
One can find London postal codes using various resources. One can find postal codes in London, England online at websites such as LondonTown and GeoNames.
Harare is a city in Zimbabwe. Zip codes are a US postal identifier.
get your postal code from here : http://find-postalcode.com/ and putting it in your account
The best place to find zip codes is the United States Postal Service (USPS) online website. You can also find postal zip codes at the website MyZipCodeMap.
Europe is a continent of many countries, so there are many postal codes in these countries. Not every country has postal codes. Depending on where you are writing to, will determine what address you use.
There are many countries with 5-digit postal codes, and 09327 could be in any of them.
The United States Postal Service official website is the easiest place to find the postal zip codes of cities. Websites such as Freemake and Phaster also allow you to find the postal zip codes of cities.
There are zipcodes for China. For Dalian 116000 You're welcome / the swedish postalworker
You can find the US postal zip code for Seattle by going to a postal zip code finder online. Another way to find US postal codes is to go to a post office. There are directories at post offices which list postal codes.
They are only called ZIP codes in the U.S. and Philippines, where it stands for Zone Improvement Plan. In most countries they are called postal codes or postcodes. In India, they are called pincodes (PIN = Postal Index Number). About 140 countries utilize postal codes now. Most are numeric, so if a country has a 5 digit postal code, they can potentially have up to 99,999 different postal codes. Of course not all possible values are used, but that is the maximum. In the U.S., there is a 5-digit ZIP Code followed by an optional ZIP+4 extension. Technically that means just shy of 1 billion postal codes are possible in the U.S. About a dozen countries use letters mixed in with their postal codes. Canada, Venezuela and U.K. are examples. Most countries don't use many of the letters that could be easily confused with numbers, such as I, O, S and Q. Even so, this dramatically increases the number of postal codes that is mathematically possible in those countries.