Rural Route addresses that are vacant for 90 days or longerĪddresses for businesses or homes under construction and not yet occupiedĪddresses in urban areas identified by a carrier as not likely to be active for some time Total No-Stat Addresses are addresses that can be classified as "No-Stat" for many reasons, including: Total Vacant Addresses are addresses that delivery staff on urban routes have identified as being vacant (not collecting their mail) for 90 days or longer. Total Number of Addresses reflect all addresses (residential and business) that are recorded by the USPS. To the USPS, the address is either occupied and requires mail service or is vacant and does not. While occupancy status is recorded, USPS does not capture any information about the nature of the vacancy or the address itself, other than whether it is a residential or business address. These data are collected by USPS to facilitate efficient mail delivery. Because of its administrative origin, there are a few important items to remember when working with these data. USPS provides aggregate vacancy and no-stat counts of residential and business addresses that are collected by postal workers and submitted to HUD on a quarterly basis. Use of the data is permitted only for activities related to the " stated purpose" outlined in the sublicense agreement. Under the current agreement with the USPS, HUD can make the data accessible only to governmental entities and non-profit organizations registered as users. The potential power of these data is that they represent the universe of all addresses in the United States and are updated every three months. HUD is making these data available for researchers and practitioners to explore their potential utility for tracking neighborhood change on a quarterly basis. In 2005, HUD entered into an agreement with the United States Postal Service (USPS) to receive quarterly aggregate data on addresses identified by the USPS as having been "Vacant" or "No-Stat" in the previous quarter.
For more information please refer to the Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ), which HUD strongly urges all current and potential users to read before attempting to analyze or apply these data. The most recent change has been the introduction of a new program that the USPS calls Move to Competitive (MTC) service, which resulted in a dramatic increase in the number of addresses. Changes in the way the USPS manages its address data have made longitudinal analysis using the USPS Vacancy Data more challenging.