Showing posts with label Forever Stamps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Forever Stamps. Show all posts

Sunday, January 09, 2011

US Forever Stamps are Now Forevermore 

Recently, the United States Postal Service (the “USPS”) announced an important new policy regarding the First Class postage stamps used to mail one ounce letters.  From now on, all new one-ounce First Class stamps will be “Forever Stamps.”  
 
In other words, no matter how much you pay for them today, these stamps will always be worth whatever the one-ounce letter rate is in the future.  Currently, the one-ounce rate is 44 cents, but even if it rises to $2 in the future, today’s Forever Stamps will be worth enough to pay it.  This is why the USPS will not mark the Forever Stamps with any particular denomination (face value).

These new stamps will probably be a welcome sight to non-stamp collectors.  Now, as long as you have some of the Forever Stamps, whenever the postal rates go up (as they inevitably do), you won’t need to buy new, more costly one-ounce stamps or small-value stamps to make up the difference between the old and the new.

Of course, these new Forever Stamps won’t be the first ones used by the USPS for First Class mail.  However, up to now, there’s only been one.  That first Forever Stamp first came out in April 2007 and shows the Liberty Bell.  Originally selling for 41 cents, it now sells for 44 cents.  It, too, will be good to use on one-ounce First Class mail “forever.”  Like the Forever Stamps that will be coming out this year, the original Forever Stamp is marked “Forever” instead of with any face value.

The original Liberty Bell Forever stamp is a definitive (regular) stamp.  As part of this significant expansion of its Forever Stamp program, the new Forever Stamps will also include commemorative stamps – the stamps that are issued to commemorate or celebrate a particular person, historical event, or place.  For example, Forever commemorative stamps honoring the Lunar New Year (this year is the Year of the Rabbit) will be available for sale on January 22, 2011.  Additional Forever commemorative stamps announced for 2011 include a stamp honoring the American author Mark Twain and a set of five stamps featuring characters from Disney animated films, among others.

It’s likely that some non-stamp collectors will buy stocks of these Forever Stamps as a hedge against future postal rate increases.  The effect of this new stamp policy on stamp collectors and stamp collecting as a hobby is currently unknown, however.  It’s possible that the new stamps won’t discourage stamp collectors at all.  Stamp collectors are much more concerned about condition and scarcity than a particular stamp’s face value.  

Clearly, this new policy of the USPS will make life easier for users of the mail.  Its effect on stamp collecting remains to be seen.

Friday, May 08, 2009

Last Few Days to Buy Forever Stamps For 42 Cents


May 10 (which is a Sunday) will be the last day United States postal customers can purchase the US Forever Stamp for 42 cents. The next day, May 11, the cost for first-class, one ounce postage increases by 4.76% (two cents) to 44 cents. But don't despair: if you've read our previous blog entries about the Forever Stamp, you know that the Forever Stamp can be used to mail a one-ounce letter regardless of the current price of a First-class mail stamp, and regardless of the original price you paid for the Forever Stamp.

On the same day, May 11, the United States Postal Service is introducing Forever Stamp envelopes. Postal customers looking to beat the price changes can order the envelopes by telephoning 1-800-STAMP-24.

Forever Stamps are available online at www.usps.com, by phone at 1-800-STAMP-24, and at many grocery stores, pharmacies, convenience stores and banks.

As stamp collectors and dealers, we hate the Forever Stamps. But as mailers, we love them.

Sunday, April 19, 2009


US Postal Rates Going Up Soon So It's Time to Talk About the Forever Stamp Again!

The US Post Office has been selling the "Forever Stamp" for the past couple of years now, first for 41 cents and then, when the first class one ounce rate went up last May, for 42 cents. Well, the rate is set to go up again in a few days, this time to 44 cents. The USPS has promised that the Forever Stamp will be good for mailing one ounce first class letters at anytime in the future, regardless of rate increases.

The inevitable result is that Forever Stamps are irresistible to millions of Americans trying to save money anywhere they can in today's tough economy. And as the newest rate increase approaches, a new round of Forever Stamp stockpiling will occur, with Forever Stamps becoming even more popular than they already are.

But it seems that not quite everyone understands the concept of the Forever Stamp. People know that when they buy Forever Stamps they pay whatever the going rate is for first class one ounce stamps: currently 42 cents, but soon increasing to 44 cents. Even though the stamps have no denomination printed on them, they know their cost because that's what they're charged by the post office when they're bought. The confusion sets in when they're used after a rate increase: we've seen many a time when additional postage has been added to a Forever Stamp, apparently because the mailer didn't understand that what they paid for the stamp would still be enough despite the rate increase.

Just to eliminate the confusion, as long as the mailed piece is a first class one ounce piece, no additional postage needs to be added to a Forever Stamp. Doing so just adds to the coffers of the USPS and wastes the money of the person doing it. It may only be a couple of cents, but it all adds up.

Does the same kind of confusion surrounds the Breast Cancer stamp, since it is also non-denominated and satisfies the first class one ounce rate, no matter what was paid for the stamp at the time it was bought? We rarely see additional postage added to it, but we'd appreciate your comments.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Should You "Invest" in US Forever Stamps?


The USPS has announced yet another postal rate hike, this one to take effect May 11, 2009. The 1-ounce domestic letter rate will rise 2 cents, to 44
cents, and the international one ounce rate will rise even more, to 98 cents. Rates for many other mailing services will also increase.

Postal customers can, however, use Forever Stamps — regardless of when they were purchased — to avoid some of the bite of this and future rate hikes: Forever Stamps can be used to mail 1-ounce domestic letters after the price change without the need for additional postage. Forever Stamps are widely
available through post offices, retail outlets such as grocery stores, and online, and the USPS seems to be encouraging their use. Right now their price is 42 cents, but they'll go up to 44 cents on May 11. Forever Stamps purchased before the last rate increase (in May 2008) cost 41 cents, but regardless of what was paid for a Forever Stamp, it can be used to pay whatever the 1 ounce domestic letter rate happens to be at the time.

So, should we stock up on Forever Stamps as a means to hedge against postal increases?

No. Although we deplore the inefficiencies of the USPS which have contributed to the need for this rate hike (just like we deplore the inefficiencies of the American Big 3 automakers) the need for the increase is there. But investing in Forever Stamps by buying large quantities is a bad idea, because postal rate increases, since 1971 at least, have historically been lower than the inflation rate. Despite the numerous postal rate hikes during that period, the relative cost of stamps has actually gone down. The overall inflation rate has been higher than the postal increases, so the dollar, relative to the cost of a stamp, is worth less now than it ever has been. If the same pattern holds, as the dollar continues to go down, you'd be paying more for today's Forever Stamps than you would in the future for a "regular" stamp.

Several other countries offer the equivalent of the US Forever Stamp: the United Kingdom, Canada, France, Belgium, Finland, Norway, Sweden among others. The Forever Stamps are not a bad thing for postal customers, but they'd be a bad long-term investment.