For expatriates

Live abroad. Keep a foot in your mail back home.

Moving overseas doesn't cut your ties to U.S. banks, taxes, and accounts — and those still send paper. Keep one reliable U.S. mailing address you can read from anywhere in the world.

A person with coffee leans on an old-world balcony railing above terracotta rooftops in morning haze.
LIVING ABROAD PERMANENT ADDRESS

The expat mail problem

An ocean between you and your mail.

  • U.S. accounts need a U.S. address

    Banks, brokerages, and government agencies often want a domestic address — and don't love a foreign one.

  • Mail you physically can't get

    Whatever arrives at a friend's or relative's place is stuck there until someone deals with it.

  • Slow, expensive international forwarding

    Shipping every envelope overseas is costly and slow, and most of it you didn't need on paper anyway.

  • Deadlines that don't care where you live

    A tax notice or renewal arrives back home while you're nine time zones away with no way to see it.

How it fits expat life

A U.S. address you run from overseas.

  1. Keep a domestic address

    Give your U.S. accounts one stable address instead of a relative's spare room or a foreign one.

  2. See mail the day it arrives

    No more waiting for someone back home to check a box and let you know what came.

  3. Scan instead of ship

    Read most documents instantly, and skip the cost and delay of forwarding paper across borders.

  4. Forward only when needed

    When you truly need the physical piece, forward it internationally with the cost shown first.

What matters from abroad

The features expats depend on.

  • Document vault & search

    Keep U.S. tax forms, statements, and letters scanned and searchable for the next time an agency or bank asks.

  • Deadline detection

    Tax dates, renewals, and response deadlines surfaced and tracked, so distance doesn't cost you.

  • Read on your schedule

    Everything is in your dashboard, so time-zone gaps don't turn into phone-tag with a service back home.

  • International forwarding

    Send the paper you actually need across borders, with costs and customs steps shown before you confirm.

A day in the life

Meet Sam.

Sam moved to Portugal three years ago but still files U.S. taxes and keeps U.S. investment accounts. Those accounts all point to one address: Sam's MyEverAddress. On a Sunday evening in Lisbon, Sam opens the dashboard and finds a brokerage tax form and a notice from an old utility. The tax form is scanned and downloaded for the accountant back home; the utility notice turns out to be a final statement Sam scans and archives. What used to mean an email to a cousin and a two-week wait now takes five minutes and no favors.

Worth knowing

Honest about a complex situation.

  • Residency and taxes are complicated abroad

    A U.S. mailing address does not determine your tax residency, domicile, or legal status, and expat tax situations can be complex. This service receives and organizes mail; it isn't tax or legal advice. Work with a professional on the questions that matter.

  • Institutions set their own rules

    Whether a given bank or agency accepts this address for your purpose is their decision, and rules vary. Confirm before relying on it.

  • You verify once

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

Keep your U.S. mail within reach.

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