Regex for EPF UAN
12-digit Universal Account Number for EPF.
The pattern
^\d{12}$
What it matches
100123456789234567890123
What it doesn't match
123456789011234567890123ABC123456789
Notes & gotchas
UAN (Universal Account Number) is a 12-digit number issued by EPFO. It links all EPF member IDs across employers, so the same UAN follows an employee through job changes.
Code in your language
Use the explainer's Code tab to generate ready-to-paste snippets in JavaScript, Python, Java, .NET, Go, Ruby, and PHP for this pattern.
Open in explainer →About this pattern
India-specific identifiers are governed by various authorities (UIDAI for Aadhaar, Income Tax Dept for PAN, RBI for IFSC, GSTN for GSTIN, etc.). Regex confirms format; for definitive validation, integrate with the issuing authority's verification API.
Quick usage in different languages
Once you've validated a candidate value matches this pattern, you'll typically use it inside your application code. Each language has its own regex syntax:
- JavaScript:
new RegExp(pattern).test(value) - Python:
re.match(pattern, value)with raw strings:r"pattern" - Java:
Pattern.compile(pattern).matcher(value).matches() - C# / .NET:
Regex.IsMatch(value, pattern) - Go:
regexp.MustCompile(pattern).MatchString(value)— Go uses RE2 so some advanced features aren't available - Ruby:
value =~ /pattern/orpattern.match?(value) - PHP:
preg_match('/pattern/', $value)
The explainer's Code tab generates these for any pattern you paste — including the right escaping and idioms for each language.
Common pitfalls
- Anchors matter. If the pattern uses
^and$it expects the entire input to match. To find this pattern inside a longer text, remove the anchors and use the/gflag. - Case sensitivity. Letter ranges like
[A-Z]only match uppercase. Use theiflag or[A-Za-z]for case-insensitive matching. - Escape user input. If you're building a regex from a string variable, escape regex metacharacters first to avoid bugs or injection.
- Performance. For this specific pattern the risk is low, but be cautious of nested quantifiers when adapting it — they can cause exponential backtracking on adversarial input.
See also
Browse all 300 patterns in the library, or open this regex in the interactive explainer for a token-by-token breakdown, live testing, and code in seven languages.
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