The Best “New Address” Cards That Will Make Your Friends Jealous

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Brittney Dulin-Rogers
May 07, 2026
Icon Time To Read3 min read
Icon CheckEdited ByRebecca Edwards

Brittney Dulin-Rogers is a Move.org writer covering moving and relocation, with a background in freight shipping and extensive firsthand experience with cross-country moves.

Moving announcement cards are back, and honestly, it’s about time.

There’s something satisfying about making a move feel official after surviving the chaos of packing and unpacking. A good announcement card turns that mess into a simple “we did it” moment.

The best part? Today’s new address card ideas are nothing like the old-school versions. They’re personal, stylish, often funny, and actually shareable, making your move feel more like a life update than a boring formality.

A woman reading a new address announcement from a friend, in the kitchen.

Image: andresr, iStock

Are moving announcement cards still a thing?

Yes, absolutely, and they have personality now.

Some people send printed cards, some go digital, and many do both. Think cute postcards, funny photo cards, little illustrated homes, or even a QR code to a house tour or RSVP.

People are still sending them, just in a way that feels more like a fun life update and less like a chore.

What do you write on a new address card?

Short answer: your new address, who moved, and a little personality.

That’s it.

You don't need to write a novel. You just need to include the basics:

  • Your name or household name
  • Your new address
  • Optional move-in date
  • Optional housewarming or RSVP info
  • A short message

Think of it as a tiny announcement, not a legal filing.

Types of new address cards people love right now

If you want fun, new address cards instead of something generic, these styles feel current without trying too hard.

Minimalist and modern

If you’re not into anything over-the-top, go simple. Minimalist cards keep it clean with neutral colors, basic fonts, and maybe a small house detail, if you want. No fluff, no extras. Even something like, “We’ve moved. Same people, new place. [Your New Address]” gets the job done.

Photo-based announcements

Photo cards are an easy way to make this feel more like you. Use whatever you’ve got, your front porch, a pile of boxes, that “we got the keys” moment, or your pet already acting like they run the place. It makes it feel less formal and more like a real update.

This works well if you want something more personal and not so stiff. Even a simple line like, “New keys, new memories, new address,” feels natural and easy.

Humorous or themed cards

Humor helps soften the stress of moving, so try one of these angles:

  • “We finally unpacked enough to send this.”
  • “Please update your records and your GPS.”
  • “Yes, we willingly moved again.”
  • “New house, same dysfunction.”

This keeps your cards light but hard to ignore.

What to include without overthinking it

This is one of those things people make way harder than it needs to be. Your card really only needs to answer one thing: where do I send stuff now? The rest is just a nice-to-have.

Here’s what to include:

  • At minimum, include your full street address, unit number if needed, city, state, and ZIP code.
  • Add a small personal touch, like a joke, seasonal note, family update, housewarming announcement, social handle, or QR code.
  • You don’t have to choose—print for close friends and family, go digital for everyone else, and skip addressing a million envelopes.

Keep it simple, make it feel like you, and call it done.

Creative ideas that actually stand out

If you want your card to feel less template-y and more scroll-stopping, these ideas are where it gets fun.

  • Add a QR code to a home tour. One of the easiest upgrades is adding a QR code linking to a home tour, photo album, RSVP, or registry. It’s a small touch that makes your card interactive and memorable.
  • Make it pet-themed. Pet-themed announcements are cute, funny, and shareable, with lines like “New house, same zoomies,” and if they’re photogenic, even better.
  • Include an illustrated map or custom art. If you want something elevated but still a little playful, try a custom house sketch, an illustrated map, or a postcard-style design—it adds personality without extra words.
  • Lean into a theme. If you want your announcement to stand out, pick a vibe and stick with it—like retro motel, vintage postcard, coastal, fresh-start mood board, or glow-up energy.

This works especially well for renters and homeowners who want new address card ideas that feel more like branding and less like bureaucracy.

When should you send change of address cards?

Send them within 2 to 8 weeks of moving. It’s soon enough to feel timely, but late enough you’re settled. If you’re behind, send them anyway—no one’s judging.

Best timing options:

  • Right after move-in: Good for simple address updates
  • 2–4 weeks later: Best for polished cards or photo announcements
  • Housewarming invite: Great if you want to combine efforts
  • Seasonal: Smart if you moved close to the holidays or the summer hosting season

Just keep the design clean, so it doesn’t feel cluttered.

Three plug-and-play message templates

If you want something quick, just grab one of these and go.

  1. Cute and classic

We’ve moved!
Our new nest is officially here:
[Your New Address]
Come visit soon.

  1. Funny and casual

Breaking news: We found a new place to keep all our stuff.
You can now find us at:
[Your New Address]
Mail, snacks, and compliments welcome.

  1. Housewarming-friendly

New address, same us.
We’re settling in at:
[Your New Address]
Housewarming details coming soon — or just show up with wine.

We came, we packed, we survived

Moving is exhausting, chaotic, and always more work than expected, but a good address card makes it feel more fun and memorable. Pick a style that actually feels like you, enjoy the creative part, and get inspired (and organized) with Move.org before your next move.

Brittney Dulin-Rogers
Written by
Brittney Dulin-Rogers is a writer with a background in blogging, radio marketing, and FTL/LTL shipping. She’s spent years turning real-life experience into writing that’s practical, approachable, and easy to connect with. In her twenties, Brittney moved more times than she can count, all thanks to her free spirit and love of new beginnings. Most recently, she packed up for a cross-country move from South Carolina to Utah in 2021 — and then back home again in 2024. Now settled (for the moment), she writes about moving with the kind of insight that only comes from living it. When she’s not writing, she’s probably wandering through a HomeGoods aisle, watching a true crime documentary, or driving her kids to the next thing on the schedule.