The UPU S10 standard defines a system for assigning 13-character identifiers to international postal items for the purpose of tracking and tracing them during shipping.

With increased liberalization and the possibility of multiple postal services operating in the same country, the use of country codes to designate the postal service is a problem. To solve this, each country has a designated postal service that controls all S10 identifiers from that country; any competing postal services will have to cooperate with the designated owner. The organization assigned by the UPU member country shall manage the issue and use of S10 identifiers, among all the operators under the authority of that UPU member country, in such a way as to ensure that no S10 identifier is reused within a period of 12 calendar months. A period of 24 calendar months, or longer, is recommended.

Format edit

The identifiers consist of a two-letter service indicator code, an eight-digit serial number (in the range 00000000 to 99999999), a single check-digit, and a two-letter ISO country code identifying the issuing postal administration's country.[1]

S10 format
1 2 3 4
AA 00000000 9 BB
  1. Service indicator code (see below)
  2. Serial number
  3. Check-digit (see below)
  4. ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code

Service indicator codes edit

Service codes are generally assigned and administered within each issuing country, but certain types of service and code ranges are used for all countries as listed here.

Code Interpretation[1]
AV–AZ Domestic, bilateral, multilateral use only, identifying RFID-tracked e-commerce items
BA–BZ Domestic, bilateral, multilateral use only
CA–CZ Parcel post; the use of CZ requires bilateral agreement.

It is not required to use CV for insured parcels but if the service indicator CV is used,

then it is recommended that it be used only on insured parcels.

DA–DZ Domestic, bilateral, multilateral use only
EA–EZ EMS; the use of EX–EZ requires bilateral agreement
GA Domestic, bilateral, multilateral use only
GD Domestic, bilateral, multilateral use only
HA–HZ E-commerce parcels; the use of HX–HY requires multilateral agreement; the use of HZ requires bilateral agreement
LA–LZ Letter post tracked; the use of LZ requires bilateral agreement
MA–MZ Letter post M bags
NA–NZ Domestic, bilateral, multilateral use only
PA–PZ Domestic, bilateral, multilateral use only
QA–QM Letter post IBRS (International Business Reply Service)
RA–RZ Letter post registered; The use of RZ requires bilateral agreement.
UA–UZ Letter post items containing goods other than other than LA–LZ (Tracked), MA–MZ (M bags), QA–QM (IBRS), RA–RZ (registered),

and VA–VZ (insured); the use of UZ requires bilateral agreement

VA–VZ Letter post insured; the use of VZ requires bilateral agreement
ZA–ZZ Domestic, bilateral, multilateral use only

Check-digit calculation edit

  1. Ignore the service indicator code and country code.
  2. Assign the weights 8, 6, 4, 2, 3, 5, 9, 7 to the 8 digits, from left to right.
  3. Calculate S, the sum of each digit multiplied by its weight.
    • For example, for the number 47312482: S = 4×8 + 7×6 + 3×4 + 1×2 + 2×3 + 4×5 + 8×9 + 2×7 = 200.
  4. Calculate the check digit C = 11 − (S mod 11).
    • If C = 10, change to C = 0.
    • If C = 11, change to C = 5.
    • For the example 47312482, C = 11 − (200 mod 11) = 11 − 2 = 9.

Python code for check-digit calculation edit

For Python 3.6 or later:

def get_check_digit(num: int) -> int:
    """Get S10 check digit."""
    weights = [8, 6, 4, 2, 3, 5, 9, 7]
    sum = 0
    for i, digit in enumerate(f"{num:08}"):
        sum += weights[i] * int(digit)
    sum = 11 - (sum % 11)
    if sum == 10:
        sum = 0
    elif sum == 11:
        sum = 5
    return sum

JavaScript code for check-digit calculation edit

function getCheckDigit(num) {
    const weights = [8, 6, 4, 2, 3, 5, 9, 7];
    const numArr = Array.from(String(num), Number);
    let sum = 0;
    numArr.forEach((n, i) => sum = sum + (n * weights[i]));
    sum = 11 - (sum % 11);
    if (sum == 10) sum = 0;
    else if (sum == 11) sum = 5;
    return sum;
}

Haskell code for check-digit calculation edit

checkDigit :: [Int] -> Int
checkDigit ns
    | c == 11 = 5
    | c == 10 = 0
    | otherwise = c
    where weights = [8, 6, 4, 2, 3, 5, 9, 7]
          s = sum $ zipWith (*) weights ns
          c = 11 - (s `mod` 11)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "S10 Identification of postal items – 13-character identifier" (PDF). UPU. 2017-10-17. Retrieved 2024-03-05.

External links edit