Keep store mail, supplier paperwork, invoices, and routine business correspondence on one real street address and manage the workflow online through PostalBridge.

Independent store owners usually want privacy, a cleaner brand-facing setup, and one address that works even when operations are distributed.
Locations are set up to receive mail on behalf of customers.
We look for mail centers that can support intake, scans, forwarding, pickup, and recipient handling.
The mailbox workflow keeps requests, history, and location handling tied together.
Real partner mail centers power the street address and mail-handling workflow behind your mailbox.
Keep shop mail, returns, and vendor paperwork visible without tying your store to your home address.
Review live locations, plan limits, and handling options before choosing the address you will rely on.
Finish Form 1583 and upload the required documents so the mail center can receive mail on your behalf.
Review envelopes, request scans, forward originals, and keep the workflow moving from wherever you are.
PostalBridge gives Shopify sellers a real street address for vendor mail, account notices, invoices, and other business correspondence that should not bounce between personal addresses.
When something important arrives, you can review the envelope online and decide whether it needs a scan, a forward, or no physical movement at all.
That creates a cleaner operational workflow for an independent online store.
These are the store-mail scenarios this page is meant to support directly.
Route invoices, account updates, terms changes, and supplier correspondence to one monitored business mailbox.
Keep the mail side of returns and receiving organized while checking package support at the chosen location.
Use one mailbox for financial and account paperwork that should not get buried inside a household mailbox.
Reduce how often your residence shows up in the routine mail flow of your store business.
The best setup depends on how your store actually handles mail and packages, not just on what sounds convenient in generic marketing copy.
Short answers to the questions store owners usually ask first.