You can find out who your congressman is in under a minute using a few official tools and reputable directories online.

How to find your congressman fast

Use one of these three easy methods (you’ll just need your ZIP code or full address):

  1. Go to the official U.S. House lookup page and enter your ZIP code to see your current representative, with a link to their official website and contact info.
  1. Use the Congress.gov “Find Your Members” tool, type your street address, city, and state, and it will show your House member (and also list your senators nearby).
  1. Use a simple ZIP-code search site like whoismyrepresentative.com, where you enter your ZIP and get the name, party, and basic contact info for your House representative.

Because I don’t know your exact address, I can’t safely guess your specific congressman without risking the wrong person, so the most accurate way is for you to plug your address into one of those tools yourself.

Step‑by‑step guide (story style)

Imagine you just moved and want to know, “Who in Congress actually speaks for my district?” You sit down at your computer and:

  1. Open the official House “Find Your Representative” page.
  1. Type in your ZIP code (and, if it asks, your full street address to break ties when a ZIP crosses district lines).
  1. Hit submit and see:
    • Your representative’s full name.
    • Their political party.
    • A link to their official website and a contact page (phone numbers, office addresses, email/feedback form).

If you’re curious and want more depth—like their voting record or bills they’ve sponsored—you can then jump to the Congress.gov member profile using your representative’s name, where you can browse bills they’ve sponsored and more biographical details.

Other useful tools and angles

To get a richer picture of “who my congressman is” beyond just a name:

  • Whoismyrepresentative.com lets you look up your member by ZIP and see quick contact info and basic details.
  • General “who represents me” tools (like nonpartisan civic lookup sites) will show not only your Congressman, but also your senators and sometimes state and local officials, using just your address.
  • Some advocacy tools even show your members of Congress on a map: click where you live and get names and phone numbers instantly, which is handy if you’re calling about a current issue.

These sites are updated as Congress changes, so if you check now (in 2026), you’ll see the current officeholder for your district rather than outdated results.

Quick HTML reference table

Here’s a simple HTML table summarizing the best ways to answer “who is my congressman” yourself:

html

<table>
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th>Method</th>
      <th>What you do</th>
      <th>What you get</th>
      <th>Source</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
  <tbody>
    <tr>
      <td>Official House lookup</td>
      <td>Enter your ZIP code (and address if requested)</td>
      <td>Your House representative’s name, website, and contact page</td>
      <td>house.gov find-your-representative [web:7]</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>Congress.gov address search</td>
      <td>Enter full street address, city, state</td>
      <td>Your House member plus links to member profiles and legislation</td>
      <td>Congress.gov “Find Your Members” [web:9]</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>ZIP code lookup site</td>
      <td>Enter your ZIP code</td>
      <td>Representative’s name, district, basic contact info</td>
      <td>whoismyrepresentative.com [web:1]</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>Map-based tools</td>
      <td>Zoom to your neighborhood and click your location</td>
      <td>Names of your members of Congress and how to contact them</td>
      <td>Call Congress tool [web:5]</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>Broader “who represents me” sites</td>
      <td>Enter address once</td>
      <td>List of federal, state, sometimes local officials</td>
      <td>Representative finder portals [web:6][web:8]</td>
    </tr>
  </tbody>
</table>

Final tip

For the most precise answer to “who is my congressman,” use your full street address on the official House site or Congress.gov, since ZIP codes can cover more than one district and only the exact address guarantees the right representative.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.