Every state in the U.S. offers some form of address privacy protection โ but the programs are buried in government websites, written in bureaucratic language, and almost never explained clearly. This guide changes that.
When you register a vehicle, vote, get a driver's license, or pay property taxes, your home address becomes part of the public record โ accessible to anyone who knows where to look. For most people this is a mild inconvenience. For others, it's a genuine safety risk.
Address Confidentiality Programs (ACPs) are free, state-run programs that assign you a substitute mailing address. Government agencies โ the DMV, courts, voter registration, utilities โ use that substitute address instead of your real one. Mail sent to your substitute address is forwarded to you by the state. Your actual home stays private.
These programs were originally created for domestic violence survivors, but most states have expanded eligibility to include stalking victims, sexual assault survivors, and in several states, anyone with a documented privacy need.
How the Substitute Address System Works โEligibility varies by state. Use our checker to find out if you qualify.
Four steps from application to a private address in the public record.
Most states require you to apply with the help of a trained ACP advocate at a participating agency โ not directly through the state.
The state issues you a substitute address โ typically a P.O. box at the Secretary of State's office โ within 1โ4 weeks.
Provide your substitute address to the DMV, voter registration, banks, employers, and utilities. They are legally required to accept it.
First-class mail sent to your substitute address is forwarded to your actual home. Renewal is typically required every 4 years.
Select your state for a complete guide: eligibility requirements, application steps, processing time, and renewal information.
Answer five questions about your situation and your state. Our eligibility checker will tell you whether you likely qualify for your state's ACP, what documents you'll need, and how long the process typically takes.
What ACP covers when you close on a house, which records stay public, and how to use a land trust or LLC when the program isn't enough.
Read the guide โMost participants forget about renewal until it's too late. Here's exactly what to do 60 days before your program enrollment ends.
Read the guide โProperty deed records, business filings, and court records often fall outside ACP coverage. Know the gaps before you apply.
Read the guide โRemote workers and home-based business owners in several states can now use ACP to keep their home address off business filings.
Read the guide โA PO Box doesn't protect your address on government records. A virtual mailbox doesn't either. Here's what each option actually does.
Read the comparison โDMV, voter rolls, courts, utilities โ the list of agencies legally required to accept your ACP substitute address varies by state.
Read the guide โA printable, step-by-step checklist covering every document you'll need, every agency to notify after approval, and a timeline tracker for your state's process. Free PDF download.
Download Free Checklist (PDF)No โ and this distinction matters. A P.O. Box is a mailing address, but it has no legal protection. Government agencies like the DMV, courts, and voter registration are not required to accept it, and your real address often remains in their databases regardless.
An ACP substitute address is a legally recognized government address. State agencies are required by law to use it in place of your real home address across their records. The substitute address appears on your driver's license, voter registration, and court filings โ your real address does not.
No. Address Confidentiality Programs are designed to be accessible without legal representation. Most states require you to apply through a trained ACP advocate at a participating organization โ such as a domestic violence shelter, rape crisis center, or legal aid office โ but this is a free service, not a paid attorney.
A few states allow direct applications without an advocate. See your state's guide for specifics.
Processing times vary significantly by state. California's Safe at Home program typically issues a substitute address within 5โ10 business days of a complete application. Texas takes 2โ4 weeks. Washington State, which runs one of the oldest ACPs in the country, is often faster โ sometimes within a week.
Emergency processing is available in most states if you have an active protective order or documented immediate safety concern. See your state's guide for current processing times and emergency options.
Partially โ and this is one of the most important limitations to understand. ACP substitute addresses are accepted by state-administered records (DMV, voter rolls, courts). However, county-recorded property deeds are public records that most states do not fully protect through ACP alone.
If you own a home, your deed is typically still searchable by address or name. Some states have companion programs specifically for property deed redaction โ California's Home Address Confidentiality is one. Others allow a land trust or LLC to hold the property, keeping your name off the deed. See our guide on keeping your address private when buying a home for a full breakdown.
Yes, in most states โ though eligibility categories have expanded gradually and vary considerably. Most states now include stalking victims, sexual assault survivors, and victims of human trafficking. Several states, including California, Colorado, and Washington, extend eligibility to reproductive health care workers and certain public officials.
A smaller number of states have "general privacy" provisions that allow enrollment based on a documented privacy need without requiring a specific category of victimization. Use the eligibility checker to see what your state covers.
Most states set a 4-year enrollment period, after which you must renew to maintain your substitute address and program protections. A few states use shorter terms (2 years) or require annual certification.
The renewal process is generally simpler than the initial application โ in most states you can renew by mail or online without meeting with an advocate again. However, your substitute address becomes inactive if you miss the renewal deadline, which can expose your real address in state records. See our full renewal guide for state-by-state instructions.