USPS to raise stamp prices July 12 amid cash strain

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1–2 minutes

Summary

USPS will raise stamp and mailing prices July 12 as it faces declining mail volume and ongoing financial pressures.

Why this matters

The rate increases will affect mailing costs for consumers and businesses starting July 12. The story also highlights continuing questions about how the Postal Service will fund nationwide delivery while facing broader policy disputes.

The United States Postal Service will raise mailing prices July 12 as it works to address ongoing financial challenges.

The price of a First-Class Mail Forever Stamp will increase 4 cents, from 78 cents to 82 cents. Domestic postcards will rise from 61 cents to 65 cents. International postcards and letters will increase from $1.70 to $1.75, and domestic metered mail will climb from 74 cents to 78 cents.

The agency said the changes amount to an overall rate increase of 5%.

Postal officials said the service continues to face declining mail volume while maintaining delivery to more than 168 million addresses nationwide.

“We are running out of cash, and we have to make tradeoffs,” Postmaster General David Steiner told lawmakers earlier this year. “We would love to have brand new trucks driving through the neighborhoods safely, but we don’t have enough cash to do it.”

The Postal Service is also facing scrutiny over a proposed rule that would create nationwide standards for absentee voting by mail.

Under the proposal, states would provide the Postal Service with lists of “eligible mail voters” and a “unique ballot barcode.” The plan followed President Donald Trump’s March executive order, which states, “The USPS shall not transmit mail-in or absentee ballots from any individual unless those individuals have been enrolled on a state-specific list.”

Several states have indicated they may challenge the proposal in court.

While the new rates will take effect next month, debate over how to keep the Postal Service financially sustainable while maintaining universal service is expected to continue.

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