U.S. Department of Commerce

Geography

You are here: Census.govGeographyReference › ZIP Code® Tabulation Areas (ZCTAs)
Skip top of page navigation
Skip top of page navigation
ZCTAs

ZIP Code Tabulation Areas (ZCTAs)

ZIP Code Tabulation Areas (ZCTAs) are generalized areal representations of United States Postal Service (USPS) ZIP Code service areas.

The USPS ZIP Codes identify the individual post office or metropolitan area delivery station associated with mailing addresses. USPS ZIP Codes are not areal features but a collection of mail delivery routes.


How ZCTAs are Created

The Census Bureau first examined all of the addresses within each census block to define the list of ZIP Codes by block. Next, the most frequently occurring ZIP Code within each block was assigned to the entire census block as a preliminary ZCTA code. After all of the census blocks with addresses were assigned a preliminary ZCTA code, blocks were aggregated by code to create larger areas.

The Census Bureau assigned blocks that contained addresses, but did not have a single most frequently occurring ZIP Code to the ZCTA with which the blocks had the longest shared boundary.

If the area of an unassigned enclave was less than two square miles, it was assigned to the surrounding ZCTA. The Census Bureau used block group boundaries to identify and group unassigned blocks. These unassigned blocks were merged into an adjacent ZCTA based on the length of shared boundary.

For the Census 2000 ZCTAs the Census Bureau created ZCTAs that ended in "XX" to represent large areas of land without ZIP Codes or "HH" to represent large areas of water without ZIP Codes. For the 2010 Census, large water bodies and large unpopulated land areas do not have ZCTAs.

ZCTAs were created using residential and nonresidential ZIP Codes that are available in the Census Bureau’s MAF/TIGER database. ZIP Codes assigned to businesses only or single delivery point address will not necessarily appear as ZCTAs.

In most instances the ZCTA code is the same as the ZIP Code for an area.

In creating ZCTAs, the Census Bureau took the most frequently occurring ZIP Code in an area for the ZCTA code. Some addresses will end up with a ZCTA code different from their ZIP Code.

Some ZIP Codes represent very few addresses (sometimes only one) and therefore will not appear in the ZCTA universe.

Animated view of the ZCTA delineation process.

Differences between Census 2000 and 2010 Census ZCTAs

Key Differences between Census 2000 and 2010 Census ZCTAs
Census 20002010 Census
Includes the U.S. and Puerto RicoIncludes the U.S., Puerto Rico, and the Island Areas
Cover the full extent of the nation - "wall-to-wall" coverageDo not cover the full extent of the nation - "holes" exist
3-digit and 5-digit ZCTA's available5-digit ZCTA's only
"XX" suffix used to represent large land areas such as national parks"XX" retired - Large land areas such as national parks do not have ZCTA coverage
"HH" suffix used to represent large water bodies"HH" retired - Large water bodies do not have ZCTA coverage

Definitions & Reference Products

Geographic Terms & Concepts 2010 | 2000

Blog Post

FAQs

Geographic Products available for ZCTAs

Statistical Data available for ZCTAs

Statistical data for ZCTAs are available from:

  • Census 2000
  • 2010 Census
  • 2007 - 2011 American Community Survey 5-year estimates and later

Access data through American FactFinder.

ZIP Code Resources

We do offer a few statistical products by ZIP Code through our economic surveys. Information about what data are available by ZIP code can be found on the ZIP Code Statistics page.

Please contact the US Postal Service for additional information about ZIP codes.

The term ZCTA was created to differentiate between this entity and true USPS ZIP Codes.

ZCTA is a trademark of the U.S. Census Bureau; ZIP Code is a trademark of the U.S. Postal Service.


Source: U.S. Census Bureau | Geography | (301) 763-1128 |  Last Revised: December 05, 2012