![]() ![]() When mailing standard letters within the United States, you usually only need to include one Forever stamp. Most of the time, you can purchase stamps when checking out at the grocery store or from your local post office. If you’re mailing a letter from home, you’ll need to purchase stamps to add to your letter to cover the cost of mailing it. You probably already know that sending letters costs money in the form of stamps or other postage. Just make sure you're using the correct postage! The stamp on your envelope should go in the same spot as the stamp on this one. FILLING OUT AN ENVELOPE CODESo, just like the recipient’s address, the return address should include your name or the sender’s name on the first line, the sender’s street address on the second line, and the sender’s city, state, and zip code on the third line. The sender’s address should usually look like this: Like the recipient’s address, the sender’s address is broken down into three pieces that are written on separate lines. The return address should be written in the upper left hand corner of the front of the envelope. Most of the time, the return address will be your home address. That way your letter-or your bill!-doesn’t just disappear. It’s called the return address because if the recipient can’t receive the letter for some reason, it will be returned to the sender. The return address is typically the same as the sender’s address. The return address is the other main piece of a properly addressed letter. (Basically it should end up where the red square is on this example!) The return address on your envelope should be in the top left corner. FILLING OUT AN ENVELOPE HOW TOWe’ll talk more about how to write more complicated addresses (like apartment buildings and PO boxes) a bit later. This is how you write the recipient’s address on an envelope when the recipient just has a basic residential address. On the bottom line, you write the recipient’s city and state, separated by a comma, and the recipient’s zip code at the end. Below that, you write the recipient’s street address. In the example address above, you see that the recipient’s name appears on the first line of the address. ![]() A properly formatted recipient’s address will look like this on an envelope: When you write the three parts of the recipient’s address, each part listed above gets its own line.
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