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This repository contains regular expression (regex) patterns for validating phone numbers postal codes, VAT numbers, dates, currency, credit/debit cards etc. for European countries (but not only).

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Regex_Patterns

Regex Patterns for European Phone Numbers, Postal Codes, VAT Numbers, Dates, Currency, Credit and Debit cards etc.

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Overview

This repository contains regular expression (regex) patterns for validating phone numbers, postal codes, VAT numbers and some common and critical in various applications patterns like date, currency, credit and debit cards etc. for European countries (but not only).

⚠️ If you prefer, you can use the Regex Pattern Generator online tool, but keep in mind that the RPG tool is still under development!

Below are the patterns for each European country, along with a brief description.

Contents

Regex Patterns

Phone Numbers, Postal Codes and VAT Numbers


Åland Islands

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+35818[0-9]{5}$
  • Description: Åland Islands phone numbers start with +358, followed by the area code "18" and then 5 more digits. This pattern is specific to the phone numbers in this autonomous region of Finland.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^22[0-9]{3}$
  • Description: Postal codes for the Åland Islands start with "22" and are followed by 3 more digits, fitting the format of Finnish postal codes.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^FI\d{8}$
  • Description: The Åland Islands use the Finnish VAT number format, which starts with "FI" followed by 8 digits. Although Åland is autonomous, it follows the Finnish VAT system.

Albania

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+355[2-9]\d{7,8}$
  • Description: Albanian phone numbers start with +355, followed by a digit between 2 and 9, and then 7 to 8 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Albanian postal codes are made up of 4 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^ALJ\d{8}[A-Z]$
  • Description: Albanian VAT numbers start with "ALJ", followed by 8 digits and one capital letter.

Andorra

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+376[0-9]{6}$
  • Description: Andorran phone numbers start with +376, followed by 6 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^AD\d{3}$
  • Description: Andorran postal codes start with "AD" followed by 3 digits.
VAT Number
  • Not applicable as Andorra does not have a standard VAT number system like EU countries.

Austria

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+43[1-9][0-9]{3,12}$
  • Description: Austrian phone numbers start with +43, followed by a non-zero digit and 3 to 12 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Austrian postal codes are made up of 4 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^ATU\d{8}$
  • Description: Austrian VAT numbers start with "ATU", followed by 8 digits.

Belarus

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+375[2-9][0-9]{7}$
  • Description: Belarusian phone numbers start with +375, followed by a digit between 2 and 9, and then 7 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{6}$
  • Description: Belarusian postal codes consist of 6 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^BY\d{9}$
  • Description: Belarusian VAT numbers start with "BY", followed by 9 digits.

Belgium

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+32[1-9][0-9]{7,8}$
  • Description: Belgian phone numbers typically start with +32, followed by a non-zero digit and then 7 to 8 additional digits. This pattern caters to both mobile and landline numbers.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Belgian postal codes consist of 4 digits. This pattern matches a sequence of exactly four numerical digits.
VAT Number

Bosnia and Herzegovina

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+387[6][0-9]{7}$
  • Description: Bosnian phone numbers typically start with +387, followed by a 6 (indicating a mobile number) and then 7 more digits. This pattern is tailored towards mobile numbers, as they are the most commonly used.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{5}$
  • Description: Bosnian postal codes consist of 5 digits. This pattern matches a sequence of exactly five numerical digits.
VAT Number
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina does not have a VAT number system similar to that of the European Union. For business and tax purposes, companies use a national ID number system. It's essential to consult local regulations or authorities for accurate and specific requirements regarding tax identification and reporting in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Bulgaria

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+359[1-9][0-9]{7,8}$
  • Description: Bulgarian phone numbers begin with +359, followed by a non-zero digit and 7 to 8 additional digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Bulgarian postal codes consist of 4 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: BG\d{9,10}$
  • Description: Bulgarian VAT numbers start with "BG", followed by 9 or 10 digits.

Croatia

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+385[1-9][0-9]{7,8}$
  • Description: Croatian phone numbers start with +385, followed by a non-zero digit and 7 to 8 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{5}$
  • Description: Croatian postal codes are made up of 5 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^HR\d{11}$
  • Description: Croatian VAT numbers start with "HR", followed by 11 digits.

Cyprus

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+357[2-9][0-9]{6,7}$
  • Description: Cypriot phone numbers start with +357, followed by a digit between 2 and 9, and then 6 to 7 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Cypriot postal codes consist of 4 digits. This pattern matches a sequence of exactly four numerical digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^CY\d{8}L$
  • Description: Cypriot VAT numbers start with "CY", followed by 8 digits and a final letter.

Czech Republic

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+420[1-9][0-9]{8}$
  • Description: Matches Czech phone numbers. Begins with +420 and is followed by 9 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{3}\s?\d{2}$
  • Description: Matches Czech postal codes, consisting of three digits, an optional space, and two more digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^CZ\d{8,10}$
  • Description: Czech VAT numbers start with "CZ", followed by 8 to 10 digits.

Denmark

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+45[2-9][0-9]{7}$
  • Description: Danish phone numbers begin with +45, followed by a digit between 2 and 9, and then 7 more digits. This pattern covers the standard 8-digit format after the country code.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Danish postal codes consist of 4 digits. This pattern matches a sequence of exactly four numerical digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^DK\d{8}$
  • Description: Danish VAT numbers start with "DK", followed by 8 digits.

Estonia

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+372[5-9][0-9]{6,7}$
  • Description: Estonian phone numbers start with +372, followed by a digit between 5
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{5}$
  • Description: Estonian postal codes consist of 5 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^EE\d{9}$
  • Description: Estonian VAT numbers start with "EE", followed by 9 digits.

Faroe Islands

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+298[0-9]{6}$
  • Description: Faroe Islands phone numbers start with +298, followed by 6 digits. This pattern covers all standard phone numbers in the Faroe Islands.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^FO-\d{3}$
  • Description: Postal codes in the Faroe Islands consist of "FO-" followed by 3 digits. This format is unique to the Faroe Islands.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^FO\d{6}$
  • Description: Faroe Islands VAT numbers start with "FO" followed by 6 digits. This pattern reflects the standard VAT number format used in the Faroe Islands.

Finland

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+358[1-9][0-9]{4,11}$
  • Description: Finnish phone numbers start with +358, followed by a non-zero digit, and then 4 to 11 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{5}$
  • Description: Finnish postal codes consist of 5 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^FI\d{8}$
  • Description: Finnish VAT numbers start with "FI", followed by 8 digits.

France

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+33[1-9][0-9]{8}$
  • Description: Matches French phone numbers. Begins with +33 and is followed by 9 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{5}$
  • Description: French postal codes are also 5 digits in length. This pattern matches a sequence of five numerical digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^FR[A-HJ-NP-Z0-9]{2}\d{9}$
  • Description: French VAT numbers start with "FR", followed by two characters (either digits or letters except O and I) and then 9 digits.

Germany

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+49[1-9][0-9]{1,14}$
  • Description: Matches German phone numbers. Begins with +49 and is followed by 9 to 15 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{5}$
  • Description: German postal codes consist of 5 digits. This pattern matches a sequence of exactly five numerical digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^DE\d{9}$
  • Description: German VAT numbers start with "DE", followed by 9 digits.

Greece

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+30[2-9][0-9]{9}$
  • Description: Matches Greek phone numbers. Begins with +30, followed by a digit from 2 to 9, and then 9 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{3}\s?\d{2}$
  • Description: Matches Greek postal codes, consisting of three digits, an optional space, and two more digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^EL\d{9}$
  • Description: Greek VAT numbers start with "EL", followed by 9 digits.

Hungary

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+36[1-9][0-9]{8}$
  • Description: Hungarian phone numbers begin with +36, followed by a non-zero digit and 8 additional digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Hungarian postal codes consist of 4 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^HU\d{8}$
  • Description: Hungarian VAT numbers start with "HU", followed by 8 digits.

Iceland

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+354[0-9]{7}$
  • Description: Icelandic phone numbers start with +354, followed by 7 digits. This pattern covers the standard phone numbers used throughout Iceland.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{3}$
  • Description: Icelandic postal codes consist of 3 digits, which are unique to specific regions and municipalities within the country.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^IS\d{5,6}$
  • Description: Icelandic VAT numbers start with "IS" and can be either 5 or 6 digits long. This reflects the structure used for VAT registration in Iceland.

Ireland

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+353[1-9][0-9]{6,9}$
  • Description: Irish phone numbers begin with +353, followed by a non-zero digit, and then 6 to 9 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^(D6W|[A-Z]{1}[0-9]{1,2}|[A-Z]{2}[0-9]{1,2}|[A-Z]{1}[0-9]{1}[A-Z]{1}|[A-Z]{2}[0-9]{1}[A-Z]{1})$
  • Description: Irish postal codes (Eircode) are alphanumeric and follow several formats, including Dublin postal districts (e.g., D6W).
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^IE\d{7}[A-WY][A-I]?|IE[0-9+][A-Z+][0-9]{5}[A-WY]$
  • Description: Irish VAT numbers start with "IE", followed by 7 digits and one or two letters. Variants include an additional character before the last digit for newer numbers.

Italy

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+39[0-9]{6,12}$
  • Description: Matches Italian phone numbers, beginning with +39 and followed by 6 to 12 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{5}$
  • Description: Matches Italian postal codes, which consist of 5 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^IT\d{11}$
  • Description: Italian VAT numbers start with "IT", followed by 11 digits.

Kosovo ⚠️

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+383[1-9][0-9]{6,7}$
  • Description: Kosovo phone numbers start with +383, followed by a digit between 1 and 9, and then 6 to 7 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{5}$
  • Description: Kosovo postal codes consist of 5 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^XK\d{8}[A-Z]$
  • Description: Kosovo VAT numbers start with "XK", followed by 8 digits and one capital letter.

Latvia

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+371[2-9][0-9]{7}$
  • Description: Latvian phone numbers begin with +371, followed by a digit between 2
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^LV-\d{4}$
  • Description: Latvian postal codes start with "LV-" followed by 4 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^LV\d{11}$
  • Description: Latvian VAT numbers start with "LV", followed by 11 digits.

Liechtenstein

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+423[0-9]{3,12}$
  • Description: Liechtenstein phone numbers start with +423, followed by 3 to 12 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Liechtenstein postal codes are made up of 4 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^LI\d{5}$
  • Description: Liechtenstein VAT numbers start with "LI", followed by 5 digits. The country uses a simpler system due to its smaller size.

Lithuania

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+370[6-9][0-9]{7}$
  • Description: Lithuanian phone numbers start with +370, followed by a digit between 6 and 9, and then 7 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^LT-\d{5}$
  • Description: Lithuanian postal codes start with "LT-" followed by 5 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^LT\d{9,12}$
  • Description: Lithuanian VAT numbers start with "LT", followed by 9 or 12 digits.

Luxembourg

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+352[0-9]{3,11}$
  • Description: Luxembourg phone numbers start with +352, followed by 3 to 11 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Luxembourg postal codes consist of 4 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^LU\d{8}$
  • Description: Luxembourg VAT numbers start with "LU", followed by 8 digits.

Malta

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+356[0-9]{8}$
  • Description: Malta phone numbers begin with +356, followed by 8 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^[A-Z]{3}\s?\d{2,4}$
  • Description: Maltese postal codes consist of three letters followed by a space (optional) and 2 to 4 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^MT\d{8}$
  • Description: Maltese VAT numbers start with "MT", followed by 8 digits.

Moldova

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+373[0-9]{8}$
  • Description: Moldovan phone numbers begin with +373, followed by 8 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Moldovan postal codes consist of 4 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^MD\d{8}$
  • Description: Moldovan VAT numbers start with "MD", followed by 8 digits.

Montenegro

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+382[6-9][0-9]{6,7}$
  • Description: Montenegrin phone numbers typically start with +382, followed by a digit between 6 and 9, and then 6 to 7 more digits. This pattern covers both mobile and landline numbers.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{5}$
  • Description: Montenegrin postal codes consist of 5 digits. This pattern matches a sequence of exactly five numerical digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^ME\d{8}$
  • Description: Montenegrin VAT numbers start with "ME", followed by 8 digits. Montenegro, not being an EU member, has its own VAT system.

Monaco

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+377[0-9]{8,9}$
  • Description: Monaco phone numbers begin with +377, followed by 8 to 9 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^980\d{2}$
  • Description: Monaco postal codes start with 980 followed by two additional digits.
VAT Number
  • Monaco does not have a distinct VAT number system and uses the French VAT system. Businesses in Monaco typically use French VAT numbers, which start with "FR", followed by two characters (either digits or letters except O and I) and then 9 digits.

Netherlands

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+31[0-9]{9}$
  • Description: Matches Dutch phone numbers. Begins with +31 and is followed by 9 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^[1-9][0-9]{3}\s?[A-Z]{2}$
  • Description: Matches Dutch postal codes, which consist of four digits followed by two letters.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^NL\d{9}B\d{2}$
  • Description: Dutch VAT numbers start with "NL", followed by 9 digits, "B", and 2 more digits.

North Macedonia

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+389[2-9][0-9]{6,7}$
  • Description: North Macedonian phone numbers begin with +389, followed by a digit between 2 and 9, and then 6 to 7 additional digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: North Macedonian postal codes consist of 4 digits. This pattern matches a sequence of exactly four numerical digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^MK\d{13}$
  • Description: North Macedonian VAT numbers start with "MK", followed by 13 digits. This format reflects the country's specific tax identification system.

Norway

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+47[2-9][0-9]{7,8}$
  • Description: Norwegian phone numbers begin with +47, followed by a digit between 2 and 9, and then 7 to 8 additional digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Norwegian postal codes consist of 4 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^NO\d{9}MVA$
  • Description: Norwegian VAT numbers start with "NO", followed by 9 digits and end with "MVA" (which stands for "Merverdiavgift", the Norwegian term for VAT).

Poland

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+48[0-9]{9}$
  • Description: Matches Polish phone numbers, beginning with +48 and followed by 9 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{2}-\d{3}$
  • Description: Matches Polish postal codes, which consist of two digits, a hyphen, and three more digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^PL\d{10}$
  • Description: Polish VAT numbers start with "PL", followed by 10 digits.

Portugal

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+351[1-9][0-9]{8}$
  • Description: Matches Portuguese phone numbers. Begins with +351 and is followed by 9 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}-\d{3}$
  • Description: Matches Portuguese postal codes, which consist of four digits, a hyphen, and three more digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^PT\d{9}$
  • Description: Portuguese VAT numbers start with "PT", followed by 9 digits.

Romania

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+40[1-9][0-9]{8,9}$
  • Description: Romanian phone numbers start with +40, followed by a non-zero digit and 8 to 9 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{6}$
  • Description: Romanian postal codes are made up of 6 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^RO\d{2,10}$
  • Description: Romanian VAT numbers start with "RO", followed by between 2 and 10 digits.

San Marino

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+378[0-9]{6,10}$
  • Description: San Marino phone numbers start with +378, followed by 6 to 10 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^4789\d$
  • Description: San Marino postal codes are "4789" followed by one digit.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^SM\d{5}$
  • Description: San Marino VAT numbers start with "SM", followed by 5 digits. Despite its size, San Marino has its own VAT system separate from Italy.

Serbia

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+381[6-9][0-9]{6,8}$
  • Description: Serbian phone numbers start with +381, followed by a digit between 6 and 9, and then 6 to 8 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{5}$
  • Description: Serbian postal codes consist of 5 digits. This pattern matches a sequence of exactly five numerical digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^RS\d{9}$
  • Description: Serbian VAT numbers start with "RS", followed by 9 digits. Serbia, not being an EU member, has its own VAT registration system.

Slovakia

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+421[1-9][0-9]{8}$
  • Description: Slovak phone numbers begin with +421, followed by a non-zero digit and 8 additional digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{3}\s?\d{2}$
  • Description: Slovak postal codes have 5 digits, typically written with a space after the first three digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^SK\d{10}$
  • Description: Slovak VAT numbers start with "SK", followed by 10 digits.

Slovenia

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+386[1-9][0-9]{6,7}$
  • Description: Slovenian phone numbers start with +386, followed by a non-zero digit and 6 to 7 additional digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Slovenian postal codes consist of 4 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^SI\d{8}$
  • Description: Slovenian VAT numbers start with "SI", followed by 8 digits.

Spain

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+34[6-9][0-9]{8}$
  • Description: Matches Spanish phone numbers. Begins with +34, followed by a digit from 6 to 9, and then 8 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^(?:0[1-9]|[1-4]\d|5[0-2])\d{3}$
  • Description: Spanish postal codes consist of 5 digits. The first two indicate the province, the third one a large town, city or main delivery rounds, and the last two digits the delivery area and the secondary delivery route or link to rural areas.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^ES[A-Z]\d{7}[A-Z]$|^ES[A-Z][0-9]{7}[0-9A-Z]$|^ES[0-9]{8}[A-Z]$
  • Description: Spanish VAT numbers start with "ES", followed by various formats including a letter, 7 digits, then a letter; or 8 digits then a letter.

Sweden

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+46[0-9]{7,13}$
  • Description: Matches Swedish phone numbers. Begins with +46 and is followed by 7 to 13 digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{3}\s?\d{2}$
  • Description: Matches Swedish postal codes, consisting of three digits, an optional space, and two more digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^SE\d{12}$
  • Description: Swedish VAT numbers start with "SE", followed by 12 digits.

Switzerland

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+41[1-9][0-9]{8}$
  • Description: Swiss phone numbers begin with +41, followed by a non-zero digit and 8 additional digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{4}$
  • Description: Swiss postal codes consist of 4 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^CHE\d{9}MWST|TVA|IVA$
  • Description: Swiss VAT numbers start with "CHE", followed by 9 digits and end with "MWST", "TVA", or "IVA", depending on the language region (German, French, or Italian for VAT).

Ukraine

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+380[3-9][0-9]{8}$
  • Description: Ukrainian phone numbers start with +380, followed by a digit between 3 and 9, and then 8 more digits.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^\d{5}$
  • Description: Ukrainian postal codes consist of 5 digits.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^UA\d{12}$
  • Description: Ukrainian VAT numbers start with "UA", followed by 12 digits.

United Kingdom

Phone Number
  • Pattern: ^\+44[1-9][0-9]{9,10}$
  • Description: UK phone numbers start with +44, followed by a digit between 1 and 9, and then 9 to 10 additional digits. This pattern covers various formats including landlines, mobiles, and other services.
Postal Code
  • Pattern: ^(GIR ?0AA|[A-Z]{1,2}[0-9]{1,2} ?[0-9][A-Z]{2})$
  • Description: Matches UK postal codes.
VAT Number
  • Pattern: ^GB\d{9}$|^GB\d{12}$|^GBGD\d{3}$|^GBHA\d{3}$
  • Description: UK VAT numbers start with "GB", followed by either 9 digits, 12 digits, or specific codes like "GD" or "HA" for government departments and health authorities, respectively. Despite Brexit, the UK continues to use a VAT system similar to that of the EU.

Common Patterns

Dates

European date formats typically use the day-month-year format, which differs from the month-day-year format used in the United States.

A regex pattern to match this format can look like this: ^(0?[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])/(0?[1-9]|1[012])/\d{4}$

This pattern checks for a valid day (01 to 31), month (01 to 12), and a 4-digit year. The 0? allows for dates to be written with or without a leading zero (e.g., "1/1/2024" or "01/01/2024").


Currency

To match amounts in euros, which might include commas for thousands separators and a period for the decimal point, you can use the following pattern: ^€\s?\d{1,3}(,\d{3})*(\.\d{2})?$

This pattern supports amounts like "€1,000.00", "€100", and "€ 2,500.50". It ensures there is a euro symbol at the beginning, optional whitespace, followed by a number that may include commas and exactly two decimal places.


Emails

To validate email addresses using a regex pattern that covers most common formats, you can use the following pattern:

  • Pattern: ^[a-zA-Z0-9._%+-]+@[a-zA-Z0-9.-]+\.[a-zA-Z]{2,}$
  • Description: This pattern matches standard email addresses that consist of a local part (username) and a domain part. The local part allows letters, digits, dots, underscores, and special characters like %, +, and -. The domain part includes letters, digits, and hyphens, followed by a top-level domain (e.g., .com, .net, .org) with a minimum of two characters.

Examples of valid emails:

This pattern is robust and should work for most email validation scenarios but may need adjustments for edge cases or specific requirements.


Vehicle Registration Codes

Vehicle registration codes in Europe can vary, but a simple pattern to match a generic format might be: ^[A-Z]{1,3}-\d{1,4}-[A-Z]{1,3}$

This pattern allows for 1 to 3 letters, followed by 1 to 4 digits, and then 1 to 3 letters again, all separated by dashes. This format matches some European vehicle registration codes but might need adjustments for specific countries.


Credit and Debit Card Patterns

Below are regex patterns for various types of credit and debit cards. These patterns match the general format of card numbers issued by major card providers.

Keep in mind that these patterns only validate the format, not the actual validity of the card numbers.

Visa

  • Pattern: ^4[0-9]{12}(?:[0-9]{3})?$
  • Description: Visa cards start with a 4 and have either 13 or 16 digits.

MasterCard

  • Pattern: ^5[1-5][0-9]{14}$
  • Description: MasterCard numbers start with digits 51 through 55 and have 16 digits.

American Express

  • Pattern: ^3[47][0-9]{13}$
  • Description: American Express card numbers start with 34 or 37 and have 15 digits.

Discover

  • Pattern: ^6(?:011|5[0-9]{2})[0-9]{12}$
  • Description: Discover cards start with 6011 or 65 and have 16 digits.

Diners Club

  • Pattern: ^3(?:0[0-5]|[68][0-9])[0-9]{11}$
  • Description: Diners Club cards start with 300-305, 36, or 38 and have 14 digits.

JCB

  • Pattern: ^(?:2131|1800|35\d{3})\d{11}$
  • Description: JCB cards start with 2131, 1800, or 35 and have 15 or 16 digits.

Maestro

  • Pattern: ^(?:5[0678]\d{2}|6\d{3})\d{8,15}$
  • Description: Maestro cards have 12 to 19 digits and start with 50, 56-69.

UnionPay

  • Pattern: ^62[0-9]{14,17}$
  • Description: UnionPay cards start with 62 and have 16 to 19 digits.

Usage

PHP

To use regex patterns in PHP, we can use the preg_match function.

Here's an example of how to validate a German phone number:

$pattern = '/^\+49[1-9][0-9]{1,14}$/';
$phoneNumber = '+491234567890';

if (preg_match($pattern, $phoneNumber)) {
    echo "Valid German phone number.";
} else {
    echo "Invalid German phone number.";
}

Here's an example of how to validate a credit card number:

$patterns = [
    'visa' => '/^4[0-9]{12}(?:[0-9]{3})?$/',
    'mastercard' => '/^5[1-5][0-9]{14}$/',
    'amex' => '/^3[47][0-9]{13}$/',
    'discover' => '/^6(?:011|5[0-9]{2})[0-9]{12}$/',
    'diners' => '/^3(?:0[0-5]|[68][0-9])[0-9]{11}$/',
    'jcb' => '/^(?:2131|1800|35\d{3})\d{11}$/',
    'maestro' => '/^(?:5[0678]\d{2}|6\d{3})\d{8,15}$/',
    'unionpay' => '/^62[0-9]{14,17}$/'
];

$cardNumber = '4111111111111111'; // example Visa card number

foreach ($patterns as $type => $pattern) {
    if (preg_match($pattern, $cardNumber)) {
        echo "Valid $type card number.";
        break;
    }
}

Python

To use regex patterns in Python, we can use the re module, which provides support for regular expressions.

Here's an example of how to validate a German phone number:

import re

# Regex pattern for a German phone number
pattern = r'^\+49[1-9][0-9]{1,14}$'

# Sample German phone number to test
phone_number = '+491234567890'

# Using the re.match function to check if the pattern matches the phone number
if re.match(pattern, phone_number):
    print("Valid German phone number.")
else:
    print("Invalid German phone number.")

Here's an example of how to validate a credit card number:

import re

patterns = {
    'visa': r'^4[0-9]{12}(?:[0-9]{3})?$',
    'mastercard': r'^5[1-5][0-9]{14}$',
    'amex': r'^3[47][0-9]{13}$',
    'discover': r'^6(?:011|5[0-9]{2})[0-9]{12}$',
    'diners': r'^3(?:0[0-5]|[68][0-9])[0-9]{11}$',
    'jcb': r'^(?:2131|1800|35\d{3})\d{11}$',
    'maestro': r'^(?:5[0678]\d{2}|6\d{3})\d{8,15}$',
    'unionpay': r'^62[0-9]{14,17}$'
}

card_number = '4111111111111111'  # example Visa card number

for card_type, pattern in patterns.items():
    if re.match(pattern, card_number):
        print(f"Valid {card_type} card number.")
        break

C#

In C#, we can use the System.Text.RegularExpressions namespace to work with regex.

Here's an example of how to validate a German phone number:

using System;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

class Program
{
    static void Main()
    {
        string pattern = @"^\+49[1-9][0-9]{1,14}$";
        string phoneNumber = "+491234567890";

        if (Regex.IsMatch(phoneNumber, pattern))
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Valid German phone number.");
        }
        else
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Invalid German phone number.");
        }
    }
}

Here's an example of how to validate a credit card number:

using System;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

class Program
{
    static void Main()
    {
        var patterns = new (string CardType, string Pattern)[]
        {
            ("Visa", @"^4[0-9]{12}(?:[0-9]{3})?$"),
            ("MasterCard", @"^5[1-5][0-9]{14}$"),
            ("Amex", @"^3[47][0-9]{13}$"),
            ("Discover", @"^6(?:011|5[0-9]{2})[0-9]{12}$"),
            ("Diners", @"^3(?:0[0-5]|[68][0-9])[0-9]{11}$"),
            ("JCB", @"^(?:2131|1800|35\d{3})\d{11}$"),
            ("Maestro", @"^(?:5[0678]\d{2}|6\d{3})\d{8,15}$"),
            ("UnionPay", @"^62[0-9]{14,17}$")
        };

        string cardNumber = "4111111111111111";  // example Visa card number

        foreach (var (CardType, Pattern) in patterns)
        {
            if (Regex.IsMatch(cardNumber, Pattern))
            {
                Console.WriteLine($"Valid {CardType} card number.");
                break;
            }
        }
    }
}

Java

In Java, regex functionalities are provided by the java.util.regex package.

Here's an example of how to validate a German phone number:

import java.util.regex.Matcher;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;

public class Main {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        String pattern = "^\+49[1-9][0-9]{1,14}$";
        String phoneNumber = "+491234567890";

        Pattern r = Pattern.compile(pattern);
        Matcher m = r.matcher(phoneNumber);

        if (m.find()) {
            System.out.println("Valid German phone number.");
        } else {
            System.out.println("Invalid German phone number.");
        }
    }
}

Here's an example of how to validate a credit card number:

import java.util.regex.Matcher;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;

public class Main {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        String[][] patterns = {
            {"Visa", "^4[0-9]{12}(?:[0-9]{3})?$"},
            {"MasterCard", "^5[1-5][0-9]{14}$"},
            {"Amex", "^3[47][0-9]{13}$"},
            {"Discover", "^6(?:011|5[0-9]{2})[0-9]{12}$"},
            {"Diners", "^3(?:0[0-5]|[68][0-9])[0-9]{11}$"},
            {"JCB", "^(?:2131|1800|35\\d{3})\\d{11}$"},
            {"Maestro", "^(?:5[0678]\\d{2}|6\\d{3})\\d{8,15}$"},
            {"UnionPay", "^62[0-9]{14,17}$"}
        };

        String cardNumber = "4111111111111111";  // example Visa card number

        for (String[] pattern : patterns) {
            Pattern r = Pattern.compile(pattern[1]);
            Matcher m = r.matcher(cardNumber);
            if (m.find()) {
                System.out.println("Valid " + pattern[0] + " card number.");
                break;
            }
        }
    }
}

Ruby

Ruby has built-in support for regular expressions.

Here's an example of how to validate a German phone number:

pattern = /^\+49[1-9][0-9]{1,14}$/
phone_number = "+491234567890"

if phone_number.match(pattern)
  puts "Valid German phone number."
else
  puts "Invalid German phone number."
end

Here's an example of how to validate a credit card number:

patterns = {
  'visa' => /^4[0-9]{12}(?:[0-9]{3})?$/,
  'mastercard' => /^5[1-5][0-9]{14}$/,
  'amex' => /^3[47][0-9]{13}$/,
  'discover' => /^6(?:011|5[0-9]{2})[0-9]{12}$/,
  'diners' => /^3(?:0[0-5]|[68][0-9])[0-9]{11}$/,
  'jcb' => /^(?:2131|1800|35\d{3})\d{11}$/,
  'maestro' => /^(?:5[0678]\d{2}|6\d{3})\d{8,15}$/,
  'unionpay' => /^62[0-9]{14,17}$/
}

card_number = "4111111111111111" # example Visa card number

patterns.each do |type, pattern|
  if card_number.match(pattern)
    puts "Valid #{type} card number."
    break
  end
end

JavaScript

Here's an example of how to validate a German phone number:

const pattern = /^\+49[1-9][0-9]{1,14}$/;
const phoneNumber = '+491234567890';

if (pattern.test(phoneNumber)) {
    console.log("Valid German phone number.");
} else {
    console.log("Invalid German phone number.");
}

Here's an example of how to validate a credit card number:

const patterns = {
    visa: /^4[0-9]{12}(?:[0-9]{3})?$/,
    mastercard: /^5[1-5][0-9]{14}$/,
    amex: /^3[47][0-9]{13}$/,
    discover: /^6(?:011|5[0-9]{2})[0-9]{12}$/,
    diners: /^3(?:0[0-5]|[68][0-9])[0-9]{11}$/,
    jcb: /^(?:2131|1800|35\d{3})\d{11}$/,
    maestro: /^(?:5[0678]\d{2}|6\d{3})\d{8,15}$/,
    unionpay: /^62[0-9]{14,17}$/
};

const cardNumber = '4111111111111111';  // example Visa card number

for (let type in patterns) {
    if (patterns[type].test(cardNumber)) {
        console.log(`Valid ${type} card number.`);
        break;
    }
}

Go

Go has built-in support for regular expressions through the regexp package. Here's an example of how to validate a German phone number:

package main

import (
    "fmt"
    "regexp"
)

func main() {
    // Example: Validate a German phone number
    pattern := `^\+49[1-9][0-9]{1,14}$`
    phoneNumber := "+491234567890"

    re := regexp.MustCompile(pattern)
    match := re.MatchString(phoneNumber)

    if match {
        fmt.Println("Valid German phone number.")
    } else {
        fmt.Println("Invalid German phone number.")
    }
}

Swift

Swift uses the NSRegularExpression class for regex. Here’s an implementation guide:

import Foundation

func validatePhoneNumber(phoneNumber: String) {
    let pattern = "^\\+49[1-9][0-9]{1,14}$"
    
    do {
        let regex = try NSRegularExpression(pattern: pattern, options: [])
        let nsString = phoneNumber as NSString
        let results = regex.matches(in: phoneNumber, options: [], range: NSRange(location: 0, length: nsString.length))
        
        if results.count > 0 {
            print("Valid German phone number.")
        } else {
            print("Invalid German phone number.")
        }
    } catch let error {
        print("Invalid regex: \(error.localizedDescription)")
    }
}

validatePhoneNumber(phoneNumber: "+491234567890")

Perl

Perl is well-known for its native regex capabilities, making it straightforward to implement regex validations:

#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;

my $pattern = '^\\+49[1-9][0-9]{1,14}$';
my $phone_number = '+491234567890';

if ($phone_number =~ /$pattern/) {
    print "Valid German phone number.\n";
} else {
    print "Invalid German phone number.\n";
}

⚠️ Important ⚠️

The regex patterns provided here are examples and may not cover all cases or nuances of phone number, postal code, VAT number and vehicle registration code formats. You would need to research and verify the patterns for each country.

Also, remember that phone number, postal code, VAT number and vehicle registration code formats can change, so it's good practice to periodically review and update these patterns.

Be sure to test thoroughly and adjust the patterns as necessary to fit your specific requirements.

Contributing

We welcome contributions from the community! If you would like to contribute, please fork the repository, make changes, and submit a pull request. You can also open an issue to discuss potential changes or add new patterns.

Thank You

If you have any questions, feel free to reach out.

Support The Project

If you find this script helpful and would like to support its development and maintenance, please consider the following options:

  • Star the repository: If you're using this script from a GitHub repository, please give the project a star on GitHub. This helps others discover the project and shows your appreciation for the work done.

  • Share your feedback: Your feedback, suggestions, and feature requests are invaluable to the project's growth. Please open issues on the GitHub repository or contact the author directly to provide your input.

  • Contribute: You can contribute to the project by submitting pull requests with bug fixes, improvements, or new features. Make sure to follow the project's coding style and guidelines when making changes.

  • Spread the word: Share the project with your friends, colleagues, and social media networks to help others benefit from the script as well.

  • Donate: Show your appreciation with a small donation. Your support will help me maintain and enhance the script. Every little bit helps, and your donation will make a big difference in my ability to keep this project alive and thriving.

Your support is greatly appreciated and will help ensure all of the projects continued development and improvement. Thank you for being a part of the community! You can send me money on Revolut by following this link: https://revolut.me/mnestorovv


License

This project is released under the MIT License.

About

This repository contains regular expression (regex) patterns for validating phone numbers postal codes, VAT numbers, dates, currency, credit/debit cards etc. for European countries (but not only).

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