You have one specific member of the U.S. House who represents your district, but I can’t see your exact address, so I can’t tell you their name directly. Instead, here’s how to quickly look it up and get some useful extras along the way.

Quick answer

To find your U.S. representative right now, go to the official House “Find Your Representative” page and enter your ZIP code (and then full address if prompted).

Step‑by‑step: find “who is my US representative”

  1. Open this official House page: house.gov/representatives/find-your-representative.
  1. Type in your ZIP code and submit.
  1. If more than one district uses your ZIP, it will ask for your full street address to match you to the correct district.
  1. You’ll see your representative’s name plus a link to their official site and contact page.

Alternative tools if you want more than just your House member:

  • USAGov’s “find and contact elected officials” (shows president, senators, and many state/local officials).
  • “My Reps” (myreps.datamade.us): enter your address to see federal, state, county, and local officials in one list.

Extra: your other federal representatives

Even though “US representative” usually means your House member, remember that you also have:

  • 1 U.S. representative (House member) for your congressional district.
  • 2 U.S. senators for your state.

You can find your senators:

  • On senate.gov/senators (search by state).

How to contact your representative once you find them

Typical options on their official website include:

  • An email or “Contact Me/Share Your Opinion” form.
  • Phone numbers for the Washington, D.C. office and local district offices.
  • Mailing addresses for letters or casework help (e.g., issues with a federal agency).

If you prefer by phone, you can call the U.S. Capitol switchboard at 202‑224‑3121 and ask to be connected to your representative’s office after you know their name.

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