After five straight semiannual price hikes, the U.S. Postal Service is finally holding stamp prices regular this January.
For greater than 15 years, the USPS has been losing money though it’s imagined to sustain itself financially without taxpayer funds. To offset inflation and limit the agency’s losses, officials have recently enacted a series of aggressive price hikes which have left Americans grumbling.
Essentially the most recent stamp price change, in July, lifted the associated fee of a “Perpetually” stamp to 73 cents. The value is now 33% higher than it was in 2021, when stamps cost 55 cents.
The Postal Service broke with tradition when it announced last fall that there wouldn’t be one other price increase to kick off 2025. The agency said its prior adjustments had boosted revenue and expressed hope that cooling inflation would help stabilize costs.
“Our strategies are working, and projected inflation is declining,” Postmaster General Louis DeJoy said in a September news release. “Due to this fact, we are going to wait until no less than July before proposing any increases for market dominant services.”
Despite DeJoy’s upbeat tone about improving conditions, the Postal Service lost $9.5 billion in fiscal yr 2024 and said it expects to lose money again in 2025.
Stamp prices remain flat, shipping costs could rise
The dimensions of the last stamp price change likely factored into the choice to carry off on increases in January amid criticism concerning the mounting cost of postage. The associated fee of a “Perpetually” stamp went up 5 cents in July, which tied a 2019 hike as the most important stamp price increase ever. (These stamps cover the postage to mail a 1-ounce letter throughout the U.S., no matter any future price increases.)
However the break from price increases will likely be short-lived. In a September filing, the Postal Service said it expects to return to a twice-a-year cadence of price increases in 2026 and 2027.
While stamp prices are remaining flat for now, the Postal Service is pushing to extend shipping costs on Jan. 19.
If the Postal Regulatory Commission approves proposed changes, shipping prices will rise 3.2% for Priority Mail and Priority Mail Express services and three.9% for USPS Ground Advantage services. High-volume shippers who use Parcel Select services would also see a 9.2% increase.
Why are shipping costs going up if stamp prices should not? In a November release, the Postal Service explained that stamp prices are mainly based on the buyer price index, a measure of inflation, while other shipping prices “are primarily adjusted in response to market conditions.”
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