Forever Stamps have gotten a lot more expensive, relatively speaking.
The price of a first-class Forever Stamp went up a nickel Sunday, from 50 cents to 55 cents. That 10 percent increase is the largest single price jump in the history of the U.S. Postal Service, the Associated Press reports. The Postal Service has been running a multibillion-dollar deficit for years, and the price increase is an attempt to contend with an America that just doesn’t send as many letters as it used to.
The Postal Service lost $3.9 billion in 2018. First-class mail volume decreased by about 2.1 billion pieces. People are using different methods to send messages and money, Postmaster General Megan Brennan said. “The flawed business model imposed by law continues to be the root cause of our financial instability.” According to USA Today, “it was the 12th year in a row the agency reported a loss despite growth in package shipping.”
It also will cost more to send a package using priority mail. The price of a small box rose from $7.20 to $7.90; a medium box increases from $13.65 to $14.35. This could have a real effect on Postal Service revenue. While first-class mail delivery has fallen, the Postal Service’s package business has grown. The year 2018 saw an increase of almost half a billion additional packages compared with the year before. President Trump once called out the Postal Service for charging too little to deliver packages. “Should be charging MUCH MORE!” he wrote on Twitter.
There is some good news for consumers: The cost of a postcard will stay the same, at 35 cents, and the cost per additional letter ounce is decreasing from 21 cents to 15 cents. So, if you’re about to send wedding invitations to your 200 closest friends, the good news is that you’ll save $2.