How can i find the exact adress and post code of a derelict house?

i wish to find out the owner of a derelict house, first i need the exact adress

Answers:
Go up to the door, knock on it and step to the side. After my dad shoots a shotgun blast through the front screen he will open the door. Then you can ask him the address.
Go to the Royal Mail website where they have a postcode finder. all you need is to register (for free) and the address of the property

try

https://www.royalmail.com/portal/rm/post.

Good luck
www.royalmail.com

in order for this to work you need some of the adress or postcode, have a look anyway.Good luck
I'm assuming you know where this house is? Find the street name by location. Ordinance Survey maps normally show approximate property boundaries and street numbers. Match this to the location of the house that you know and you'll have the street address.

Find the postcode via the Royal Mail postcode finder on www.royalmail.co.uk . Just register and enter the street address and it'll give you the postcode.

Call up the land registry office and ask to look through their records. They should have the names and addresses of all title owners in your area.
go to your library and look in the criss-cross directory, or find the name in your white pages or yellow pages of the telephone directory. Once you have that information in hand, call the tax collector's department (that number would probably be in the front of the white phone book pages under "county") and ask who owns the place and who pays the taxes.
land registry
multimap is good to help pin down the postcode and a map reference is handy anyway if you end up in the council offices looking for records
Access the Royal Mail web site by searching for Roya Mail
I think I know what you mean and it requires leg work rather than much else.

Firstly check out the house - is there any old mail lying in the doorway - to good to be true eh?

Speak to the local postman - he may know the name by which it used to be referred or there is a redirection in place.

Speak to the neighbours - they normally know the history, or if the place is actually for sale.

Last option - speak to the council. They have all the information but will most likely want to charge.

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