Address forms
Help users fill out address forms quickly and easily.
Filling in an address can be time-consuming and frustrating. What is an Address line 2? You may not have a surname, so what should you enter in a Surname field? Avoid these confusions and help users fill out address forms.
Ensure your address form is easy to use #
Many forms use one field for first name and one for surname.
However, some people don't have a surname, or their names don't have two parts,
so how should they fill in the surname field? Use a single <input> for the name field.
Learn more about handling different name formats.
Also use a single <input> for the street address–not every address has a street number.
Be careful with form control descriptions.
For example, users in the US say ZIP, in the UK postcode.
Use <label for="zip">ZIP or postal code (optional)</label>
to make sure users know what data to enter.
Make the postal code field optional–not every address has a postal code.
Help users enter their address #
The autocomplete attribute can help users re-enter their address:
autocomplete="name"autocomplete="street-address"autocomplete="postal-code"autocomplete="country"
You can define multiple values separated by a space for autocomplete.
Say you have a form with a shipping address and another form for a billing address.
To tell the browser which postal code is for the billing address,
you can use autocomplete="billing postal-code".
For the shipping address, use shipping as the first value.
Change the label for the Enter key on on-screen keyboards with the enterkeyhint attribute.
Use enterkeyhint="done" for the last form control, and enterkeyhint="next" for the other form controls.