• House number of the individual residential or business addresses.

  • Street name of the individual residential or business addresses.

  • Colloquial sub-city features often referred to in local parlance. Unlike locality features, these typically lack official status and may lack universally agreed-upon boundaries.

  • Official sub-city features present in countries where such an additional administrative layer is used in postal addressing, or where such features are commonly referred to in local parlance. Examples include city districts in Brazil and Chile and arrondissements in France.

  • Postal codes used in country-specific national addressing systems.

  • Typically these are cities, villages, municipalities, etc. They’re usually features used in postal addressing, and are suitable for display in ambient end-user applications where current-location context is needed (for example, in weather displays).

  • Features that are smaller than top-level administrative features but typically larger than cities, in countries that use such an additional layer in postal addressing (for example, prefectures in China).

  • Top-level sub-national administrative features, such as states in the United States or provinces in Canada or China.

  • Generally recognized countries or, in some cases like Hong Kong, an area of quasi-national administrative status that has been given a designated country code under ISO 3166-1.

  • The country code in ISO 3166-1.

  • The country code and its country subdivision code in ISO 3166-2.

  • The postal address associated with the location, formatted for use with the Contacts framework.