Stamp Prices To Rise On Monday

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Stamp Prices To Rise On Monday stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS


First Posted: 05-10-08 11:22 AM   |   Updated: 05-18-08 05:12 AM

I Like ItI Don’t Like It
Us Stamps

The cost of mailing a letter goes up a penny to 42 cents on Monday, the latest in what are expected to be annual price adjustments by the Postal Service.

A new law regulating the post office makes it easier to raise rates as long as the agency doesn't exceed the rate of inflation. Rates are to be adjusted each May.

But the post office also has introduced a way for people to save money when the price goes up, the Forever stamp, which remains valid for first-class postage regardless of any increases.

With the rate increase approaching, sales of the Forever stamp reached 64 million-a-day in April, postal officials said.

Forever stamps currently sell for 41-cents, but can be used after the rate increase without any additional postage. However, when the rate goes up, so does the price of Forever stamps.

Unlike the Forever stamps, other 41-cent stamps will require additional postage under the new rates, and postal officials said they printed an additional 1.5 billion 1-cent stamps in anticipation of the demand.

Also, for the first time the agency has stamps available at the new rate before the change takes effect.

A set of five 42-cent stamps honoring pioneering journalists went on sale in April, as did a set of four stamps featuring the American flag flying at different times of day.

Story continues below

A 42-cent stamp featuring singer and actor Frank Sinatra will be released Tuesday.

The increase comes just a week after the post office announced it had a loss of $700 million in the second quarter of the fiscal year, blamed largely on declining mail volume and rising fuel prices.

While the charge for the first ounce of a first-class letter rises to 42 cents, the price of each added ounce will remain 17 cents, so a two-ounce letter will go up a penny to 59 cents.

The cost to mail a post card will also go up a penny, to 27 cents.

Other rates set for Monday:

• Large envelope, 2 ounces, $1, up 3 cents.

• Money Orders up to $500, $1.05, unchanged.

• Certified mail, $2.70, up 5 cents.

• First-class international letter to Canada or Mexico, 72 cents, up 3 cents.

• First-class international letter to other countries, 94 cents, up 4 cents.

• Priority mail flat-rate envelope, $4.75, up 25 cents.

• Express mail flat-rate envelope, $16.50, up 25 cents.

But, the Postal Service said that overall prices for Express Mail, its overnight service, will be lower at the weights and in the delivery zones used by most customers.

And Express mail and Priority mail customers can save money simply buying postage online, the agency said. Express mail customers will receive 3 percent off the published retail prices and Priority mail customers will save an average 3.5 percent.

In Los Angeles, Stamps.com said it has released new software which will include discounts on Express and Priority mail for customers buying postage through its Internet site, targeted to small business and home offices.

Postage rates last went up in May 2007, with a first-class stamp jumping 2 cents to the current 41-cent rate. That change came under the old law governing the post office, while the current boost uses the simpler procedures of the new one.

The cost of mailing a letter goes up a penny to 42 cents on Monday, the latest in what are expected to be annual price adjustments by the Postal Service. A new law regulating the post office makes it...
The cost of mailing a letter goes up a penny to 42 cents on Monday, the latest in what are expected to be annual price adjustments by the Postal Service. A new law regulating the post office makes it...
Filed by Nick Sabloff  |  Report Corrections
 
Comments
33
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 (2 pages total)
photo

Crap...this is infuriating. I just bought a role of 41 cents because my role of 39 cent stamps don't cut it. I find myself slapping two stamps on a simple business envelope.

Seems like everything is just going up up up. Gas is insane now....thanks to Bush and all his Oil buddies. It's not unusual to pay $1500 a year for cable service, and Iraq promisses a bill of $4,000 for every man woman and child in America........ I'm just going to stop mailing, calling, flying, driving and buying all the crap that we don't need anyway.....so take that USPS!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 05/10/2008
- PlantGod72 I'm a Fan of PlantGod72 47 fans permalink
photo

Now I've got to buy 1c stamps to add to the 39c and 2c stamps I already use (3 stamps per letter!)since I bought a roll of 39c stamps 2 years ago! UGH, I guess I either need to mail more letters.....or stop mailing at all (that's what I'm aiming for).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 PM on 05/10/2008

When you run out of 39c stamps, start using "forever" stamps. Or you can stop using the postal service altogether.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 PM on 05/11/2008
- Rule Of Law I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law 166 fans permalink

Bush said lower taxes for everyone--but this just seems like another way for government that's living beyond its means to reach into my pocket. Let's call it what it is--A tax!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:28 PM on 05/10/2008
- heal57 I'm a Fan of heal57 27 fans permalink

Everything is tax; private taxation too.. Our paying healthcare insurance is really a tax, social security which many of us won't get is a big tax, look at your cable tv bill, your telephone bill, cell phone bill, electric bill, gas or oil bill, more and more tax, gas tax. The tax waitresses pay on tips that you already paid the tax on [twice taxed]] bank interest is taxed. Our real tax rate is about 80%; and I'm not counting everything. Auto insurance which is mandatory is really a tax; you have to have it; property tax, sals tax, make that 90% tax rate...and you know what we get for it...NOTHING; NO INFRASTRUCTURE, NO CROSS COUNTRY RAILROAD, NO HEALTH AND PREVENTIVE , no childcare help like other countries, SERVICES UNLESS WE CAN AFFORD IT; SORRY CAPLOCK on. No decent education system; no college without going into debt...hell, make that 95%

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:32 PM on 05/10/2008

"Everything is tax...and you know what we get for it...NOTHING."

Recently on "Larry King Live", Larry King asked Michael Moore what he would do if he were president...

"I would try to lower Americans' taxes to the rate that the French pay. The French, and most of Europe, pay less 'taxes' than we do, LESS. In France, you have free health care, free college, and free or near free day care."

"For the average American, if they don't have their health care covered, it's $12,000 dollars a year out of their pocket. That's a tax. If they're paying day care, $200 bucks a week, a month, whatever. That's a few thousands a year. College loans, people are paying their college loans at 40 years old, thousands of dollars in college that you don't pay in France."

"If you added up tonight what every American, what you're paying right now out of your pocket for your college education, for day care, for health care, add that on to the taxes you pay, you're paying a LOT MORE than what they're paying in France."

...continued...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:00 AM on 05/11/2008

...continued...

"We don't call it a tax in this country. We have other words for it. That's what we're doing. We're being taxed to DEATH. The French, for all that they riot and get out in the street and protest and whatever, you NEVER see them out in the street saying, we pay too many taxes. They NEVER complain about that because they GET SOMETHING FOR IT. They get to go to a doctor when they're sick. Their kids get to go to school and college, not have to worry about it. They have help with their kids if they have kids and have to work. That's all taken care of. They don't complain about their taxes. We complain about our taxes because we can't get a pothole fixed."

Why do we hate the French? Perhaps we hate them for their FREEDOM from all the hardships that WE THE PEOPLE must endure in America!

Stay safe, healthy and happy,
Love, Loretta

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 AM on 05/11/2008
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 (2 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect