Random China Address
Random format-valid example China address, postal code, and profile data for testing.
Random China Address FAQ
RandAddress generates realistic-looking Chinese addresses covering 31 provincial-level divisions. Each profile includes a street address, city, province, 6-digit postal code, and a complete identity—perfect for developers testing China-facing applications or anyone needing China address data for privacy purposes. The province, city, and postal code are drawn from real GeoNames Chinese postal data and are correctly paired; street names and house numbers are plausible placeholders for testing, not deliverable mailing addresses.
China's administrative system includes 31 provincial-level divisions: 22 provinces such as Guangdong, Sichuan, and Zhejiang; 5 autonomous regions including Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia, and Tibet; and 4 direct-administered municipalities (Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, Chongqing). Addresses are written from the broadest unit to the narrowest—province, then city, then district, then street and building—with the 6-digit postal code's first two digits identifying the province or municipality: 10 for Beijing, 20 for Shanghai, 51 for Guangdong, 71 for Shaanxi, and so on.
Our database spans 31 provincial-level divisions—including the municipalities of Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, and Chongqing; economically prominent provinces like Guangdong, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Sichuan, and Shandong; and autonomous regions such as Xinjiang, Tibet, and Guangxi—covering cities from first-tier metropolises down to smaller prefectural seats.
The province, city, and postal code are drawn from real GeoNames Chinese postal data and are correctly paired, but the identity information (name, email, phone) is fictitious. Phone numbers follow the standard Chinese mobile format: the +86 country code followed by an 11-digit mobile number that always starts with 1—for example, +86 138 1234 5678 or +86 150 9876 5432. The opening 3-digit block (such as 138, 139, 150, 188, or 199) encodes the carrier—China Mobile, China Unicom, or China Telecom—rather than the city, which matches how real Chinese mobile numbers behave: they travel with the subscriber and are not tied to any specific province. Street names and house numbers are plausible placeholders for testing.
Zero storage. You can use the tool for free with no account registration or barriers to entry. Saved addresses remain on your device and are never uploaded to any database—in fact, we don't even have a central server for your data.