WASHINGTON (AP) — It’ll cost another penny to mail a letter next year.
The cash-strapped U.S. Postal Service said Thursday that it will raise postage rates on Jan. 27, including a 1-cent increase in the cost of first-class mail to 46 cents.
It also will introduce a new global “forever” stamp, allowing customers to mail first-class letters anywhere in the world for one set price of $1.10. Currently, the prices vary depending on the international destination, with letters to Canada and Mexico costing 85 cents.
Under the law, the post office cannot raise stamp prices more than the rate of inflation, or 2.6 percent, unless it gets special permission. The post office, which expects to lose a record $15 billion this year, has asked Congress to give it new authority to raise prices by 5 cents, but lawmakers have failed to act.

Photo Credit: AP
The mail agency also will increase rates on its shipping services, such as priority mail, by an average of 4 percent.
The post office, which is struggling with debt and low cash flow, said the rate hikes were partly aimed at bringing in new revenue while maintaining its pricing advantage in the shipping business. Private companies such as UPS and FedEx, which offer similar shipping services, regularly adjust their prices.
The post office lost $5.1 billion in fiscal 2011, mostly due to a 5.8 percent decline in revenue for first-class mail. Financial results are expected to be even worse when final figures for fiscal 2012 are released next month. Earlier this year, it was forced to default on two payments due to the Treasury totaling $11.1 billion for future retiree health benefits because it lacked sufficient cash reserves.
While the Postal Service has said it will continue seeking ways to cut costs, Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe has made clear that the agency has little left it can do to bring in significant new revenue. After months of congressional delay, he said it’s now up to lawmakers to pass a postal fix when they return to Washington after the November elections.
The latest rate increase, for instance, will make only a small dent in the Postal Service’s losses, caused by the economic downturn, movement of mail to the Internet and a congressional requirement that the mail agency fund future retiree medical benefits years in advance. Earlier this year, the mail agency floated a proposal to Congress aimed at increasing stamp prices to 50 cents as a way to generate $1 billion in new revenue.

Photo Credit: AP
The Postal Service has also asked Congress to allow it reduce mail delivery from six to five days a week and reduce its annual $5 billion payment for the future retiree health benefits.
The current 45-cent rate for first-class mail in the U.S. has been in effect since January. Since 2006, the Postal Service has now increased the price of the stamp five times, from 39 cents to 46 cents.
Because stamps are now being issued as forever stamps, they will remain good for first-class postage. But buying new forever stamps will cost more when the prices go up.
While the price for the first ounce of a first-class letter will rise to 46 cents, the cost for each additional ounce will remain at the current 20 cents.
Other price increases:
-Postcards will go up one penny to 33 cents.
-Priority mail, small box, $5.80; medium box, $12.35; large box, $16.85.
-Priority mail, regular envelope, $5.60; legal envelope, $5.75; padded envelope, $5.95.
-Delivery confirmation will be free on packages, including priority mail and parcel post, rather than being an extra charge.
The Postal Service, an independent agency of government, does not receive tax money for its day-to-day operation but is subject to congressional control.





















































































































Comments (54)
Panchogun
Oct. 12, 2012 at 3:08pmDid you know…
that the only reason that a private company has not moved into the field of daily mail delivery is because the Post Office is protected by statute ? The only reason the post office exist as the only source of daily mail delivery, is because the government prohibits anyone else from doing it.
If daily mail delivery was opened to the private sector, we would get better delivery, at a less expensive rate. On a level playing field, the private sector will always out-perform the government–always.
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NotaLemming
Oct. 12, 2012 at 1:52pm[The post office, which expects to lose a record $15 billion this year, has asked Congress to give it new authority to raise prices by 5 cents, but lawmakers have failed to act.]
I think this is VERY miss-stated. Failed to act? What evidence can you show that this was a failure to act? The fact this was not acted on may be a very DELIBERATE action.
for a moment I thought I was reading HuffPo were they make up facts.
Don’t do this again. It is beneath the slogan “The Truth Has No Agenda”.
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jamesctheman
Oct. 12, 2012 at 10:36amDoping is expensive so they need the extra revenue
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watashbuddyfriend
Oct. 12, 2012 at 10:30amI don’t see anything about removing the Unionized waste and abuse of the system!
CUT OUT all junk mail! Then, CUT OUT those delivery people who will not be needed to process, and handle full postage mail.
Of course that will cut federal employees.
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tcseacliff
Oct. 12, 2012 at 11:30amget rid of the post office. we have UPS,DHL,FED ex. many other companies able and willing to do this job better. the postal service outgrew it usefullness due to it waste , bloated overhead,complacent employees. another glaring example of gov. employees that cannot run an efficient operation of any size. the waste is enormous. I know of some people who rent space to the U.S postal service. instead of owning many cheaper parcels of land to do business, the post office will rent these buildings at such inflated rents, and these landlords would laugh at them for being so ignorant. multiply this waste times the tens of thousands of facilities nationwide. they are idiots and should go! tired of paying higher prices for stamps and their bloated pensions and slackers!
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johnjamison
Oct. 12, 2012 at 12:44pmExactly,
They need to go through and stream line the process cut out all the fat. renegotiate the contracts and retirement packages. Then look at programs like charging the same fees for a mail box delivery as they do for a PO.box. Infact maybe charging less for a po. box as opposed to a mail box.
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Meyvn1
Oct. 12, 2012 at 10:15amPrices of everything is getting ridiculous and the value of the dollar makes it even worse. Something will give.
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702TruthSeeker
Oct. 12, 2012 at 11:50amyou are 100% correct sir, the title of this article is wrong. QE1, QE2, and QE3 are causing the prices of stamps and everything else we buy to go up
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cristo52
Oct. 12, 2012 at 9:12amWhy the slow drip? Just raise the cost of a stamp to $100 and the USPS will be out of business in a month, opening the door to competition, efficiency and happy customers.
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atechgeek
Oct. 12, 2012 at 4:34pmIf people stop using the post office, Senor Hussein will mandate that everyone buy stamps every month. Got to keep the useless government agencies and free loaders afloat.
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Grand design
Oct. 12, 2012 at 8:58amBy raising their prices on mail, they are driving away customers for good! It’s no longer cost effective to use the mail system!
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Gr8ful1jim
Oct. 13, 2012 at 6:40amThe cost of a first class letter will be 46 cents. Why don’t you try to deliver that letter for 46 cents. I wish people would educate themselves on the US Postal Service. IT IS NOT A GOVERNMENT RUN Agency. It receives absolutely NO FUNDING from the government yet is subject to governmental over site and abusive regulation. There is real problems with it at the administrative level. The carriers, clerks, distribution center workers , truck drivers and postmasters are the real hero’s that make things work. Wake up and educate yourselves before complaining about something you obviously know little about.
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Cat_Ion
Oct. 13, 2012 at 9:50pmIT IS GOING UP ONE RED CENT! ONE CENT!!
What’s that going to cost you extra per year? $2, $5 $10 $20? Seriously, per YEAR?
And you’re all jacked out of shape over it?
What does gasoline go up in any given week?
And how much has anything else gone up in the last 4 or 10 years?
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Tickdog
Oct. 12, 2012 at 8:52amit pays to bank and pay bills online now.
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formidable_foe
Oct. 12, 2012 at 4:50pmThat is becoming true, and seems like it could all be part of the further justification for our government to tax and increase their control of the internet. They have already begun pursuing the angle of becoming more involved with the internet in order to “protect” us. Enjoy all the free things on the internet now because I have a feeling we will end up paying for more and more of them as time goes on. Looking to the future, ISPs, along with other companies will raise their rates in order to survive and compensate for the taxation and over-regulation of the government. As a result, everyone may not be able to afford internet access, and that would not be “fair.” At that point, the internet would be a “right” for every American, and our government would therefore have to initiate a takeover in order to ensure this right is extended to all. Following the mysterious death of Bill Gates, The Obamanet would then be born. Wow….. I got a bit Orwellian there, huh?
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Landon410
Oct. 12, 2012 at 8:09amahhhh yes…. another example of unions destroying something and terrible leadership by a government entity
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Gonzo
Oct. 12, 2012 at 8:09amGood, raise the price to where the USPS is self supporting….or goes out of business.
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eaglescout1998
Oct. 12, 2012 at 8:08amIf the post office’s bread and butter supposedly comes from junk mail, perhaps they should impose higher postage on those companies that send them out.
As far as cutting Saturday delivery: I am pissed off enough as it is that USPS doesn’t deliver on Sundays.
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FightingBear
Oct. 12, 2012 at 8:06amThe US Postal Service is still the best bargain on the planet. They should just raise the price for a stamp by 20-25 cents and be done with it.
If I was living in the Key West Florida and wanted to send a letter with a couple of pictures to my 98 year old grandma in Seattle, Washington, and I offered 46 cents to the person willing to take my letter there….I’m guessing I wouldn’t have very many people lining up to deliver my letter.
The USPS says we will do it and we will even come and pick your letter up from your house/mailbox…I still use them..and I believe you cannot find a beter deal on anything….anywhere. I’m 50 years old and have been using their services for at least 30 years in thirty years of sending letters and packages, I had 1 package damaged (it was insured and they took care of the problem,) and I have had 1 letter that was lost/misdelivered/disappeared.
I would say my experience with them has been outstanding over the past 30 years. I am in no way, shape, or form associated with the USPS, I simply utilize their services.
If they can make it on their own…then let them…if they can’t, shut it down. They should be self supporting. Yes they will have to raise their rates because less people use them, they may even have to cut their services to make ends meet….that is OK too. When they can no longer make it without tax payer funding, it will be time to shut it down.
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atechgeek
Oct. 12, 2012 at 4:50pmYou pay for the USPS in taxes. If the USPS was a profitable entity, you’d be paying similar to UPS.
This is why the USPS is 5.1 BILLION in the hole. It s uc ks and needs to evaporate into thin air.
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Gr8ful1jim
Oct. 13, 2012 at 6:45am@ ATECHGEEK… Educate yourself on the USPS. it receives NO TAX DOLLARS OR ANY GOVERNMENT FUNDING TO OPERATE. It is NOT an agency of the Federal Government.
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Pat Alexander
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:55amA whole 46 cents? Is that a lot? I can mail a letter from Pa and it will be in California in 2-3 days.
These prices are dirt cheap. Do you think FedEx or UPS is going to deliver anything for you for 46 cents?? Let alone come to your house and pick it up.
If they we allowed to raise postage to a reasonable & realistic level, say 75 or 80 cents their problems would quickly fade.
On a trip to the PO right after the last increase I witnessed this: A surly male customer was berating the female clerk over the increase. It was the end of the world. Obnoxious.
As luck would have it, I got behind him later at a local stop & go. He bought $10 worth of scratch off lottery tickets. None hit.
I would have liked to explain something about economics to this lad, but it would have been wasted breath.
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Malrick
Oct. 12, 2012 at 8:37amI can email for free.
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101stIraqVet
Oct. 12, 2012 at 8:54am“If they we allowed to raise postage to a reasonable & realistic level, say 75 or 80 cents their problems would quickly fade.”
No, the union would demand pay raises and more benefit increases. You can’t bring in all that extra money and expect the union to not get their slice of the pie.
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Melika
Oct. 12, 2012 at 9:35amI can’t agree with you more. Given the service the Post Office provides, it is dirt cheap. And I’m tired of hearing all the people who claim they e-mail for “free” or pay their bills online for “free”. It isn’t free, you just don’t see the costs, including the costs you pay for your service to access the internet, let alone the costs that are passed onto you from the companies with which you do business. E-mail is great for chain letters or quick notes, but when I want to communicate with friends and family, I call. When I want to send a birthday or holiday card, I mail one (digital cards are so cheap and easy they only count to the most insensitive, lazy person).
When I need to get an object to another state or across town, there isn’t anyone cheaper or faster than the USPS and they almost always get it right. Their failure rate to the amount of mail they process is unbelievably low. They need to be run like a private business. Get congress out – it would probably reduce the rates.
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GiveUsJustice
Oct. 12, 2012 at 10:16am“It isn’t free, you just don’t see the costs, including the costs you pay for your service to access the internet, let alone the costs that are passed onto you from the companies with which you do business.”
I guess you are suggesting someone get rid of internet to start sending mail instead? That’s backward’s technology. As long as you have internet and are not replacing it, then yes, email is free. You suggest adding to your cost by using the USPS because you have to pay for internet. You aren’t thinking that through at all.
“E-mail is great for chain letters or quick notes, but when I want to communicate with friends and family, I call.”
Skype is free, and it is video calling as well. Everyone that has a cell phone no longer needs a house phone. We got rid of ours and now save $40 a month.
“When I need to get an object to another state or across town, there isn’t anyone cheaper or faster than the USPS and they almost always get it right.”
Are we talking about objects that just require stamps? That’s what the argument is over, and I think we’ve cleared up that there is multiple options cheaper than the USPS for getting what you need that requires stamps to someone else without incurring fees at all.
They want all their workers to make 2x more than people working just as “hard” as them in the private sector. Quit crying about not getting enough help from the government.
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Cat_Ion
Oct. 13, 2012 at 6:36pmMalrick -
And the government and other interested parties can read your email.
Same for texting and cell calls…
USPS is the only form of PRIVATE communication left, (Other than face to face).
Agree with an earlier poster who pointed out that their apparent “INACTION” is, in fact, a DELIBERATE ACTION.
The government may want USPS to fold. Its a control-freak-thing.
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Detroit paperboy
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:54amJust wait til these morons take over your healthcare……………….
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formidable_foe
Oct. 12, 2012 at 4:17pmSo true…. & the healthcare industry will be so much easier to manage than the postal service.
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oldwmn
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:48amI sell on ebay..books, I use Media Mail, and yes I went to UPS and their prices are way too high, extra fees , I will be last person on planet to use snail mail, Hallmark factory shut down, rough week for a Renaissance Woman to survive in techno gizzmo world..BLAST the CELL PHONE..no one sends cards or letters which to me is from the heart, now its all cold emails, the watch is gone, payphones gone,sigh..i am an old farm girl amish woman trapped in a TRON world..I hate it.. go ahead cut out Saturday Delivery..and the three union workers inside post office PBSSSTTTT
the Union Postal worker who sorts can not touch the Union Postal Worker who drives the truck,
the Union Postal worker who scans last digits of zip code sorts letters can not wait on the front windows..its INSANE..
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toiletclogga
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:38amPrivatize this POS! Why not cut the workforce, and deliver mail on Mondays and Thursdays. We do not need a daily delivery. Treat it just like trash pickup; once or twice a week.
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huey6367
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:35amThe USPS is on the ropes and charging us more instead of slashing its own costs. Blame the unions for a portion of its demise. Unions had a purpose at one time. Now they are out of control just trying to stay relevant and it is killing business.
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rulenumber62
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:27amAny privately run business would have cut out Saturday deliveries years ago. Of course, that would mean cutting out union jobs as well. Somehow I feel if, and eventually when we get fully nationalized health service like Great Britain has, it will be run much like the post office. God help us all!
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PlanetReality
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:19amWell what else is new!!!! Just like the gov when we cant run it with the substantial amout we already recd we just keep on asking for more to SQUANDER!!!!! just sent a pkg usps horrible communication and mind u i payed EXTRA for delivery confirmation!!! Not to mention the fact they act like its a privleage!!! Next pkg went out ups pay alittle extra worth it for the great cutomer service!!!!
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SamIamTwo
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:12amOh boy, buy more forever stamps now and ebay them years later. Stock up. LMAO
Buy tons of it low and sell high! LOL
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kickagrandma
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:10amAnyone else notice how few PATRIOTIC stamps there are available as compared to all the filigreed designs to look feminine and delicate? Look closely at some of them. To me the filigree looks more like arabic lettering or the lead up to it being on everything. Maybe it’s just me, but I don’t think so.
Be interesting to see what they pull for CHRISTMAS stamps.
GOD BLESS AND PROTECT. HE WILL IF we turn from our wicked ways, seek HIS face, humble ourselves and ask HIS forgiveness.
Time is running out.
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commonsenseguy
Oct. 12, 2012 at 6:54amcome on people it just going up a penny what is the big deal,you spend more than that for a gallon of gas, a cup of coffee or soda, it should cost us a dollar to mail a letter it is still cheaper than a gallon of gas, so just pay the penny and go about your business the government knows what is best for us and the country, our so called”"free universal health care will be just like the post office,it will be run by unions and will always be operating in the red and will need taxpayer money to stay a float while still paying union wages and pension’s, so just pay the penny and deal with it and besides you must believe in redistribution of wealth so that some poor person can mail a letter and the unions can get richer.
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starman70
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:16amWhere’s your common sense? This is just another gouge by the government into your pocketbook. Yes, the post office is in trouble but waste and ineffiency is a great part of the problem. Unions have strangled the service with typical work rules which cause the service dearly. Along with typically inflated retirement packages which the government pays for, how can one expect any different outcome.
One cent doesn’t seem like much but if you couple that with everything else, even that can hurt.
By the way, a .10 cent increase across the board on all “Revenue Producing Mail” otherwise known as
“Junk Mail” would go a long way to help solve the shortfall. I recently received a donation request with a printed stamp for.09 cents. How many thousaned of these did the P.O. have to process? While advertising mail makes up a lot of revenue, it also takes a lot of employee time handling all this mail.
No, the P.O. cannot survive on 1st class mail only. far too many are paying online now and that has killed the P.O., however more increases in rates will only drive more people to the online option further reducing the revenue from 1st class mail.
BASICALLY: THEYRE DAMMED IF THEY DO AND DAMMED IF THEY DON’T!
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Tankboy2adfwd
Oct. 12, 2012 at 6:47amIf the USPS could run themselves like a business instead of having to run to congress anytime they need adjust to a changing economy, they would be fine. They can only raise stamps in line with inflation without special permission. Something tells me that the way they calculate inflation today is dishonest. Fuel costs are rising rapidly. That causes all other costs to rise due to shipping. You can see that at the grocery store every week. Naturally, it costs the USPS more to get the mail from point A to point B then they can legally charge. If the inflation were calculated using the same method as it was in the 70′s, a stamp would likely cost around 75 cents or more. The post office was cut loose from the federal budget during Nixon, if I am not mistaken. That means they are funded entirely on postage. They get no funding by the government, but if they need to close unprofitable locations, change rates, change operating hours, cut work days, or fart sideways, they need to get congressional approval. We know how well congress handles money. Is it any wonder they are hurting?
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commonsenseguy
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:01amyou left out one big detail, they are union,they are still paying union wages and they are still paying into the unions pension fund which is a money pit, for every union retiree it takes 15 to 20 union members to pay their pension ,that is their biggest problem, they could easily be operating in the black if they cut the unions lose but that is not going to happen,so they will continue now and into the future to be in debt.
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Snowleopard {gallery of cat folks}
Oct. 12, 2012 at 6:29amGod above, the postal system is nothing but a blac hole, money gets flung into it and never comes back.
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Tankboy2adfwd
Oct. 12, 2012 at 6:53amWho “flings” money into the post office? They are not funded by tax dollars. They are only funded by postage. They are regulated by congress, though. See what government regulation does to business?
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Snowleopard {gallery of cat folks}
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:55am@Tankboy – has the feds not bailed out the Post Office when it could not make ends meet?
I have heard the pension funding payments have been missed and Congress has repeatedly funded them in turn. The Post Office should be run as any private business; to be successful or replaced by something better if it falls to the side.
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Hoax And Chains
Oct. 12, 2012 at 6:23amOf course prices will be going up. Everything that the government has their hands in always has rising prices and bankrupting practices. Yep… the government is here to help….
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Jive Mickey
Oct. 12, 2012 at 7:36amNaaaw. There’s no inflation. It is only 2.6% according to our guvvy-mint. I learned in grade school that the definition of inflation was devaluation of the currency by printing more notes than you had assets for. I got my “Golden Parachute” from the auto industry when I was offered 60% of my salary with cost of living until age 65. Now 6 years later, the COLA adjustment (not Coca-Cola) is more than the initial benefit. This calculates out to about 13% average inflation since 2006. So you tell me who is lying about the inflation rate.
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