QUOTE
Mail IS a big deal, even if you don't expect to get any.
You NEED a physical address and a mail address, or you likely won't be able to keep stuf like bank accounts, driver's license, plats, insurance, credit cards, etc
You NEED a physical address and a mail address, or you likely won't be able to keep stuf like bank accounts, driver's license, plats, insurance, credit cards, etc
This is not quite true.
I do not live full time yet. I have a sticks and bricks house, with a parcel # and a street address. However, I also live in an area where the Post office does NOT do street delivery. When I moved up here, this was the first time I had heard of this (They lie with that "Through rain sleet and snow, dark of night thing) The US government kindly supplies me with an official US PO Box free of charge and this IS my real, legal and official address. The street address means nothing to anyone but the county property tax tax assessor. If mail were to be addressed to my street #, it will cheerfully be rejected by the PO and returned to sender.
The PO Box is on my drivers license, my bank accounts and my voters registration card, altho I had to present my mortgage papers and parcel # to the PO to get the box. A utility bill serves as well.
If Carmax wanted to repo my car, they wouldn't have a clue where to look, yet I have a signed contract without a physical address. Same with my credit cards. BUT, the address for my CC billings is another box, in South Dakota, where I use a bill paying service similar to what most banks offer now. My bills go to the South Dakota address, they email me a copy, and I authorize the bill paying service to pay with a check from my checking account... drawn in California.
For UPS and Fed Ex deliveries, I give my work address. No one asks my for ID with the address on it. A zipcode is all my car insurance company required after I explained the mailing situation to them.
This seems a surprise to most folks when you tell them, but it is also readily accepted once explained. I DO have to explain it a lot.
There must be a list of zip codes somewhere that are accepted non street delivery zones. Perhaps if you could "move" to one of those places, and have bills set up with a service like mine, it would help.