Random Address Generator

Generate random fictional street addresses in multiple country formats. Perfect for testing, form filling, and prototyping.

Address Generator
// random fictional street addresses
click generate
About This Tool

What is the Random Address Generator?

Our random address generator creates realistic-looking but entirely fictional street addresses by combining random house numbers, street names, city names, states/provinces, and postal codes in the format of your chosen country.

Choose from US, UK, Canada, Australia, or Germany address formats — each following the correct structure and naming conventions for that country. All addresses are randomly generated and do not correspond to real locations.

Ideal for developers testing address forms, designers filling UI mockups, or anyone who needs realistic placeholder address data without using real personal information.

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Software Testing
Generate test addresses for form validation, checkout flows, shipping forms, and database seeding.
🖥️
UI/UX Design
Fill address fields in mockups and prototypes with realistic-looking placeholder data.
📋
Data Entry Training
Create practice datasets for training staff on address-based data entry systems.
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Privacy Protection
Use fictional addresses when filling forms on websites you don't fully trust.
How To Use

Start in seconds

// no signup, no install — just configure and generate.

01
Choose Country
Select a country format: US, UK, Canada, Australia, Germany, or Any for a random mix.
02
Configure Options
Toggle whether to include ZIP/postal code and state/province in the output.
03
Generate
Click Generate Address or press Enter for an instant fictional address.
04
Copy & Use
Click Copy to save the address to your clipboard for pasting into forms or designs.
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

No. All addresses are randomly generated combinations of fictional street names, numbers, and locations. They do not correspond to real places.
Yes — that's the primary use case. They're perfect for form testing, checkout flow QA, and database seeding.
Currently US, UK, Canada, Australia, and Germany. Each follows the correct address structure for that country.
They follow correct formatting patterns but are fictional, so they won't pass real-world address verification services like USPS or Royal Mail.
No. All generation happens in your browser. Nothing is sent to any server.