Set one permanent address
Use it on your accounts so the next PCS doesn't mean re-doing your address everywhere.
For military families
New base, new state, new country — a military family moves more than almost anyone. Keep one permanent mailing address that stays put through every PCS and deployment, so your mail is one thing you don't have to reorganize.

The military-move mail problem
Every PCS means updating dozens of accounts and hoping nothing falls through the cracks in between.
An OCONUS assignment can leave stateside mail hard to reach for months at a time.
When one spouse deploys, the other is left managing every piece of mail alone.
Some notices genuinely can't wait — and a mail gap during a move is exactly when they arrive.
How it fits military life
Use it on your accounts so the next PCS doesn't mean re-doing your address everywhere.
Both spouses can see and handle the same mail, whether you're together or a deployment apart.
See what arrived from on-base housing, a hotel mid-move, or an overseas posting.
Once you're settled at the new duty station, forward whatever paper you actually need.
What matters through a move
Add both spouses so either one can manage the mail — essential during a deployment.
Mail keeps landing in one place while you're between the old base and the new one.
Renewals and response dates are surfaced and tracked, so a move doesn't cost you a due date.
Read your stateside mail from an OCONUS assignment without waiting weeks for forwarding.
A day in the life
The Delgados have PCS'd four times in eight years. Their MyEverAddress hasn't changed once. When Marcos deployed last spring, Elena managed everything from their shared account: she scanned an insurance renewal, forwarded a package to their current base, and handled a bank notice the same afternoon it arrived — while Marcos, half a world away, could still see the household's mail whenever he had signal. When their next set of orders came, the address on every account was already correct. One less thing to move.
Worth knowing
Service members and families have specific rules for state of legal residence, voting, and taxes. A mailing address does not establish or change your legal residence or voting registration — keep those aligned with the rules that apply to you and the guidance available through your installation.
Whether an address is accepted for a given official purpose varies. Confirm requirements before relying on it for anything beyond receiving mail.
Setup requires identity verification and USPS Form 1583, which we guide you through.
See how it works with a fictional traveler's mail — no account needed.