Originally Posted by gprime
Yes. Apt then Street Address then name of Street.
# A unit number is placed before the civic number with a hyphen between, OR after the street type, using an acceptable unit identifier (ex. APT 10). Please see Unit Designators for a list. The unit information may be placed on the line above the street information if space is an issue.
# The civic number is the official number assigned to an address by the municipality.
# When a civic number suffix is present, there is no space when it is alpha (123A), and there is one space when it is a fraction (123 1/2).
# The street name is the official name recognized by each municipality and cannot be translated. (Ex.: Main is not Principale.) There is no space between a numerical street name with an ordinal or an alphanumeric character. (Ex.: 2ND ST or 36A ST). When the street name is numeric, there is only one space (no hyphen) between the civic number and the street name. (Ex.: 123 22ND AVE).
# The street type is provided by the municipality. Common abbreviations should be used. Please see Street Types below for a complete list. In some instances, the street type is also the street name (THE PARKWAY). The only street types that may be translated are:
ST = RUE
AVE = AV
BLVD = BOUL
A French street type is placed before the street name, unless it is an ordinal number (1re, 2e, PREMIÈRE, DEUXIÈME, etc.)
# The street direction uses the common one- or two-letter abbreviation. Please see Street Directions for a complete list.
# The official municipality name, as provided to Canada Post, the official abbreviation of the municipality, or an official alternate name, must be used and cannot be translated. (Ex.: TROIS-RIVIÈRES is not THREE RIVERS.)
# The province should always be presented using the recognized two-digit symbol. Please see Province and Territory Symbols for a complete listing. Mailers may wish to have the province written in full and placed in brackets. Ex.: (Québec)
# The postal code must be in upper case and placed two spaces to the right of the province with one space between the first three and last three characters.
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May 9th, 2006 08:31 AM #1Guests
- Join Date
- May 17th, 2005
- Location
- Ontario
- Posts
- 696
A quick question about this address
Everyone I've asked in real life hasn't been sure either, so, why not ask the internet?
I'm giving away stuff for a contest and someone gave me their address that looks like the following (actual number are changed):
#1234 5678 - 90 Ave.
Would this be Unit/Apt 1234 of building 5678 90th Ave (or.. 90 Ave)?
Just need to make sure before I ship this off! (CanadaPost.ca makes you fill in address, apt #, etc.)_______________
This account has been closed at user request. They are now known as mrG.
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May 9th, 2006 08:47 AM #2
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May 9th, 2006 08:49 AM #3Guests
[OP]
- Join Date
- May 17th, 2005
- Location
- Ontario
- Posts
- 696
Wow, thanks! Tons of information there.

EDIT (off topic):
I shipped to everyone else but this guy until I could confirm his address. It's strange how shipping a DVD to England, Mexico, Australia, and just about anywhere in the world is $5.50, but to Edmonton it costs $9.50. How does that work.Last edited by gprime; May 9th, 2006 at 08:52 AM.
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This account has been closed at user request. They are now known as mrG.
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