Pillar guide

What is DIGIPIN? The complete guide to India's digital address.

DIGIPIN is a 10-character alphanumeric code introduced by India Post that uniquely identifies any 4 m × 4 m square of land in India. It is designed to make every doorstep — including those without a formal street address — precisely locatable.

If you have ever explained your address to a delivery agent over the phone — "second left after the petrol pump, then the blue gate" — you've experienced the gap DIGIPIN is built to close. Most of India's addresses are descriptive, not coordinate-based. DIGIPIN gives every location in the country a short, unambiguous, machine-readable code that anyone can use without needing a map.

The one-paragraph definition

DIGIPIN, short for Digital Postal Index Number, is an open address standard developed by the Department of Posts (India Post) in collaboration with the Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad (IIT-H) and the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). It maps the geographic territory of India to a grid of approximately 4 m × 4 m squares and assigns each square a unique 10-character alphanumeric code. The system is open, free to use, and intended to work alongside (not replace) the existing 6-digit PIN code system.

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Why a digital address at all?

India's postal address conventions evolved over decades. They work well in planned colonies and city centres, but they break down in three common situations:

  • Rural and remote areas, where the "address" is often a village name, a landmark, and the recipient's father's name. Couriers routinely call recipients to navigate the last kilometre.
  • Informal settlements and unplanned growth, where new buildings come up faster than they can be assigned an official street and number.
  • Large complexes and gated communities, where the official PIN code covers thousands of doors and the actual door is somewhere inside a maze of internal lanes.

The result is delivery delays, failed deliveries, emergency response confusion, and an awkward dependency on phone calls to clarify location. DIGIPIN attempts to fix this by giving every doorstep a code that points to it exactly, every time, without ambiguity.

What a DIGIPIN looks like

A DIGIPIN is ten characters long, displayed in three short groups separated by hyphens for readability. A typical DIGIPIN looks like this:

4FK-9L8-J2T7

The hyphens are purely visual — they make the code easier to read and dictate, but they are not part of the data. The characters come from a limited alphabet chosen to avoid visual confusion (no O vs. 0, no I vs. 1 ambiguity).

Who created DIGIPIN and when

DIGIPIN was developed by the Department of Posts, Government of India, in partnership with the National Remote Sensing Centre (under ISRO) and IIT Hyderabad. The standard was released as an open specification so that any organisation, developer, or citizen can implement, generate, and use DIGIPINs without licensing fees or central API dependencies. India Post operates an official lookup service at dac.indiapost.gov.in, and the underlying algorithm has been documented publicly so it can be implemented locally in any programming language.

How DIGIPIN works, in plain English

The DIGIPIN algorithm takes the geographic bounding box of India and divides it recursively into ever-smaller grid cells. At each level of recursion, one alphanumeric character is added to the code to indicate which sub-cell the location falls into. After 10 levels of subdivision, the resulting cell is roughly 4 m on each side — small enough to identify a single building, often a single doorway.

The clever part: because the code is deterministic, anyone with the latitude and longitude of a point can generate the same DIGIPIN, and anyone with the DIGIPIN can recover the original grid square. No central database lookup is required. If you would like to see exactly how the grid subdivision works, our algorithm explainer walks through it step by step.

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DIGIPIN vs PIN code: they aren't competitors

The most common misconception about DIGIPIN is that it replaces your familiar 6-digit PIN code. It does not. The two systems do different things, at different scales:

PIN codeDIGIPIN
Length6 digits10 characters
Area coveredA neighbourhood or town~4 m × 4 m grid square
IdentifiesA postal areaA specific spot on the ground
Use caseSorting mail to a regionLast-mile delivery, navigation
Required by lawYes, for postal mailNo, optional

The two work together. The PIN code gets a parcel to the right town; the DIGIPIN guides the delivery agent to the exact door. For a full comparison, see our DIGIPIN vs PIN code guide.

What DIGIPIN is good at

  • Precision. Down to roughly 4 m, often enough to identify a single building.
  • Brevity. Ten characters fit on a parcel label, a WhatsApp message, or a voice instruction.
  • Offline use. Because the encoding is deterministic, DIGIPINs can be generated and decoded without any internet connection once you have the algorithm.
  • Universality across India. The grid covers the entire territory, including remote and unaddressed areas.
  • Open standard. No vendor lock-in, no licensing fees, no rate limits.

What DIGIPIN is not

It helps to be clear about what DIGIPIN is not trying to do:

  • Not a replacement for your postal address. It supplements it. You'll still write your name and door number on a parcel.
  • Not a tracking system. A DIGIPIN identifies a location at a moment in time. It doesn't broadcast where you are or follow you around.
  • Not unique to a person. The same DIGIPIN can apply to a doorway, a roof, and a basement entry that all share the same 4 m × 4 m footprint.
  • Not mandatory. No one is required to use DIGIPIN in place of their normal address.

How to find your own DIGIPIN

The fastest way is to open India Post's official Digital Address tool on your phone with location services enabled — it will read your GPS and return the DIGIPIN for where you are standing. You can also enter latitude and longitude manually, or click a point on the map. Our step-by-step guide walks through all three methods and shows you how to save the result for later.

Where DIGIPIN is being used today

Adoption is still early. India Post itself is integrating DIGIPIN into its delivery operations, and several state governments are exploring it for use in citizen services. Logistics startups in last-mile delivery, food delivery, and ride-hailing have begun piloting DIGIPIN-aware address fields. Expect adoption to accelerate as awareness grows and as more apps surface DIGIPIN inputs alongside normal address fields.

What this means for you

If you're a citizen, the practical move is simple: find your DIGIPIN once, save it alongside your address, and share it whenever a delivery, a relative, or an emergency responder needs to find your door precisely. If you're running a business that handles physical delivery — ecommerce, food, healthcare, real estate — DIGIPIN is worth adding as an optional field to your address forms. Our business handbook covers the implementation patterns that work.

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Frequently asked questions

Is DIGIPIN safe to share publicly?

A DIGIPIN reveals roughly the same information as sharing a precise pinned location on a map. If you would happily share a Google Maps pin of your home in a particular context, sharing your DIGIPIN there is comparable. If you wouldn't, treat your DIGIPIN with the same caution.

Will my DIGIPIN change if I move house?

Yes. A DIGIPIN is tied to a location, not to you. If you move, your new home has a different DIGIPIN, and the DIGIPIN of your old home stays attached to that location for whoever lives there next.

Can two homes share a DIGIPIN?

Possibly. The DIGIPIN identifies a 4 m × 4 m square. In dense urban areas — apartment buildings, narrow lanes — multiple dwellings can share the same square. In such cases, the DIGIPIN gets the delivery agent to the doorstep, and the apartment number does the rest.

Does DIGIPIN work outside India?

No. The DIGIPIN grid covers only the geographic territory of India. Other countries have their own digital address experiments — Plus Codes, What3Words, and several national systems.

See the full FAQ →

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