| City/Town Names | Most Popular Resources | ||
|
|
ZIP Code 28525 has segments in 2 Counties (Duplin, Lenoir).
The 28525 ZIP Code is centered1 in Lenoir County at latitude 35.127 and longitude -77.727. It is a standard type ZIP Code. Lenoir County is in the Eastern Time Zone (UTC -5 hours) and observes daylight savings time. The population in ZIP Code Tabulation Area (ZCTA) 28525 was 3,013 with 1,253 housing units; a land area land area of 48.57 sq. miles; a water area of 0.16 sq. miles; and a population density of 62.03 people per sq. mile for Census 2000. Demographic Profile |
Deep Run, NC 28525 Map (Marker is ZIP Code Centroid)
Local Search, 28525 ZIP Code| Distance & Driving Directions
Nearby Cities, Towns & Census Designated Places
|
Deep Run, NC
(1.9 miles NE) Tulls Mill, NC (1.9 miles N) Lawsons Mill, NC (2.4 miles ESE) Nobles Crossroads, NC (2.7 miles SE) Blands Crossroads, NC (3.9 miles NNE) |
Moss Hill, NC
(4.9 miles NNW) Pink Hill, NC (5.1 miles SSW) Albertson, NC (5.3 miles W) Nobles Mill, NC (5.3 miles ESE) Strabane, NC (5.5 miles NNW) |
Nearby Neighborhoods, Subdivisions & Other Small Populated Places
|
Wootens Crossroads, NC
(2.7 miles NW) Resaca, NC (4.3 miles SSW) Gradys Crossroads, NC (5.1 miles WNW) Drummersville, NC (7.1 miles WNW) Pot Neck, NC (7.2 miles N) |
Husseys Crossroads, NC
(8 miles NW) Jacksons Crossroads, NC (8.1 miles NE) Jackson Hights, NC (8.3 miles NE) Mary Beth Park, NC (10.2 miles NE) Scotts Store, NC (10.4 miles WSW) |
ZIP Codes - Key Concepts
- ZIP Codes are categories for grouping mailing addresses and are not exact geographic regions.
- The centroid of a ZIP Code may be in one County and the associated city/town in another.
- In rural areas, a single ZIP Code may be used for cities and towns in several different Counties.
- ZIP Code "areas" can overlap, be subsets of each other, or be artificial constructs with no geographic area.
- ZIP Codes are only loosely tied to cities.
1 Keeping the above key concepts in mind, what we informally refer to as the "center" of a ZIP Code is most often actually the centroid of a polygon.