WASHINGTON, April 7, 2016 -- The Postal Service will lose approximately $2 billion in annual revenue resulting from a price reduction mandated by the Postal Regulatory Commission (PRC) — which will go into effect on Sunday, April 10.
The PRC granted an exigent surcharge beginning in January 2014 on mailing products and services totaling $4.6 billion to recover for the massive volume and revenue losses resulting from the Great Recession. However, this amount only partially offsets Postal Service revenue losses — which the Postal Service estimates exceeded $7 billion in 2009 alone.
"Given our precarious financial condition and ongoing business needs, the price reduction required by the PRC exacerbates our losses," said Megan J. Brennan, Postmaster General and CEO. "This unfortunate decision heightens the importance of the review of our ratemaking system which our regulator is required to conduct later this year."
The PRC is required to review the market-dominant regulatory system to determine whether it is achieving the statutory objectives mandated by Congress. The Commission is empowered to modify the system or create a new system as necessary to achieve the objectives. The obligation to conduct the review arises 10 years after enactment of the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act, which occurs in December of this year.
"To provide clear guidance to all interested parties concerning the review process, we filed a petition today with our regulator to clarify the scope of the review and which provisions of the current regulatory structure are subject to potential modification or replacement," said Brennan. "By addressing preliminary issues now, the PRC can ensure an expeditious and efficient review."
To offset long-term declines in the use of First-Class Mail in particular, the Postal Service continues to aggressively improve efficiency and has reduced our annual cost base by $15 billion since 2008. Nevertheless, and despite strong multi-year growth in package deliveries, the Postal Service continues to record unsustainable financial losses due to changing market conditions and legislative and regulatory mandates which prevent the Postal Service from fully adjusting to the new market realities.
"To properly compete for customers and continue to meet America's evolving mailing and shipping needs, the Postal Service needs the financial capability to invest in the future," said Brennan. "We continue to seek legislative reforms to put the Postal Service back on a sustainable financial path, and pricing is an important component."
Among other proposals, the Postal Service continues to seek congressional action to reinstate and make the exigent surcharge permanent.
The surcharge removal means these First-Class Mail prices will be reduced to the following beginning April 10:
• Letters (1 oz.)
Current: 49 cents
Mandated Reduction: 47 cents
• Letters additional ounces
Current: 22 cents
Mandated Reduction: 21 cents
• Letters to all international destinations
Current: $1.20
Mandated Reduction: $1.15
• Postcards
Current: 35 cents
Mandated Reduction: 34 cents
Commercial prices will also decrease. A complete listing of the new prices, effective April 10, is available at www.usps.com.
The Postal Service receives no tax dollars for operating expenses and relies on the sale of postage, products and services to fund its operations.
# # #
Please Note: For broadcast quality video and audio, photo stills and other media resources, visit the USPS Newsroom.
Reporters interested in speaking with regional Postal Service public relations professionals should visit this link.
Follow us on twitter.com/USPS and like us at facebook.com/USPS. For more information about the Postal Service, visit usps.com and usps.com/postalfacts.
CONTACT: Katina Fields
202.268.6229
[email protected]


Anthropic Discusses Frontier AI Model Mythos With Trump Administration Despite Pentagon Ban
TSMC Posts Record Q1 2026 Profits Driven by Surging AI Chip Demand
Texas AG Investigates Lululemon Over "Forever Chemicals" in Activewear
SK Hynix Shares Hit Record High Amid AI Memory Demand Surge
Qantas Raises Fuel Cost Forecast Amid Middle East Oil Crisis
Rio Tinto's California Boron Assets Attract Over a Dozen Bidders, Valued at Up to $2 Billion
ASML Raises 2026 Revenue Outlook as AI Chip Demand Surges
SanDisk Joins Nasdaq-100, Replacing Atlassian on April 20
Chinese Brands Are Taking Over Brazil — And It's Just Getting Started
Baker Hughes Sells Waygate Technologies to Hexagon for $1.45 Billion
United Airlines Eyes Merger with American Airlines in Potential Industry-Shaping Deal
Nissan Plans Major Lineup Cuts and AI Expansion in Bid for Global Sales Recovery
Meta Is Building an AI Version of Mark Zuckerberg to Interact With Employees
Uber Bets Big on Autonomous Vehicles with $10 Billion Commitment
San Francisco Suspect Arrested After Molotov Cocktail Attack on OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's Home
Japan Opens Arms Export Floodgates: New Policy Draws Global Defense Interest
CSN's Cement Unit Sale Could Exceed $2 Billion as Global Giants Circle 



