For people between homes

In between places? Your mail doesn't have to be.

Sold the house, waiting on the build, renovating, or bunking with family for a while — a transition is stressful enough without your mail getting lost in it. Keep one steady address through the whole gap.

Stacked kraft moving boxes beside a bright open doorway in an empty sunlit apartment.
BETWEEN HOMES PERMANENT ADDRESS

The in-between mail problem

Transitions are exactly when mail goes missing.

  • No settled address to give

    Between the old place and the new one, there's no address you'd want to put on your accounts.

  • Changing it twice

    Filing a change of address to a temporary spot, then changing it again, is double the hassle and double the risk.

  • Mail chasing an old address

    Things keep arriving at the home you just sold, and you're relying on the new owners' goodwill.

  • Important paperwork mid-move

    Closing documents, insurance, and utility notices all land during the exact window you're least settled.

How it fits a transition

One address that bridges the gap.

  1. Set a stable address

    Point your accounts to one address now, so you don't have to change them again when you land.

  2. See everything in one place

    Whatever arrives during the move shows up in your dashboard, not scattered across temporary stops.

  3. Scan the paperwork

    Read closing documents, insurance, and utility notices the day they arrive, from wherever you're staying.

  4. Forward when you're settled

    Once you're in your new place, forward the paper you kept — or keep the address for good.

What matters in transition

The features that carry you through.

  • Change your address once

    Move senders to your permanent address a single time, instead of chasing every temporary stop.

  • Deadline detection

    Utility notices, insurance dates, and response deadlines surfaced, so nothing urgent gets buried in the move.

  • Hold & forward

    Let mail collect safely while you're unsettled, then forward it once you have a place to send it.

  • Keep it, or don't

    Cancel once you're settled, or keep the address permanently if the flexibility grows on you.

A day in the life

Meet Jordan.

Jordan sold a condo and won't close on the new house for four months, staying with a sister in the meantime. Rather than route mail to the sister's place and then change it all again, Jordan set up a MyEverAddress and moved every account to it in an afternoon. During the gap, a homeowners-insurance binder, a final utility bill from the condo, and the mortgage paperwork all arrive — each scanned and read the day it lands. When the new house is ready, Jordan forwards the physical documents there and keeps the address anyway, because never doing a change-of-address again sounds pretty good.

Worth knowing

Honest about the details.

  • It's a mailing address

    Whether an address is accepted for things like voter registration, taxes, or a driver's license varies by state and situation, and a mailing address doesn't settle residency on its own. Confirm what applies during your move.

  • Great for a gap, or for good

    Use it just for the transition, or keep it — there's no lock-in either way. See our cancellation terms.

  • You verify once

    Setup requires identity verification and USPS Form 1583, which we guide you through.

Bridge the gap without losing your mail.

See how it works with a fictional traveler's mail — no account needed.