WASHINGTON: The U.S. Postal Service filed notice on March 25 with the Postal Regulatory Commission for a temporary 8% price increase on key package shipping products, citing rising transportation costs. The proposed change, if cleared by the regulator, would take effect at midnight Central Time on April 26 and remain in place until midnight Central Time on Jan. 17, 2027. The filing marks a notable pricing shift for the Postal Service, which has long emphasized that it had avoided fuel surcharges even as transportation costs climbed across the delivery sector.

The planned increase would apply to retail and commercial domestic competitive products, specifically Priority Mail Express, Priority Mail, USPS Ground Advantage and Parcel Select. The Postal Service said no other products or services would be affected, including First-Class Stamps. The agency said the change was approved by the Governors of the Postal Service on March 24 before the filing was submitted to the commission. The review process now stands between the filing and the planned start date, with the regulator set to examine the proposed price change before it can take effect.
The Postal Service said the increase is intended to better align transportation costs with market conditions and help ensure that its actual costs of doing business are covered. It said competitors have already responded to higher fuel costs with surcharges and described its own planned charge as materially lower than fuel surcharges imposed elsewhere in the package market. The agency also said it continues to operate one of the broadest delivery networks in the country, serving more than 170 million addresses at least six days a week while relying primarily on postage and service revenue rather than tax dollars for operating expenses.
Package products affected
The package surcharge filing comes as the Postal Service faces wider financial strain tied to declining mail volumes and the cost of maintaining nationwide service. In testimony to a House subcommittee on March 17, Postmaster General David Steiner said the agency would be out of cash in less than 12 months at its current run rate if the status quo remained in place. He said annual mail volume has fallen from 213 billion pieces in 2006 to 109 billion today, a decline that has cut deeply into revenue from First-Class Mail, historically the Postal Service’s most profitable product.
Steiner told lawmakers that the organization needs more flexibility on pricing and borrowing as it works through those pressures. He also said the Postal Service remains bound to a six day delivery requirement and a nationwide retail and delivery footprint that carries high fixed costs. Against that backdrop, the latest filing leaves regular letter mail prices unchanged and focuses instead on shipping products directly exposed to transportation expenses. The current price of a First-Class stamp remains 78 cents, and the agency did not include any change to that product in the March 25 package filing.
Financial pressure remains
The filing also builds on a broader round of competitive shipping price changes that took effect earlier this year. In a November 2025 notice, the Postal Service said prices for Jan. 18, 2026 would rise about 6.6% for Priority Mail, 5.1% for Priority Mail Express, 7.8% for USPS Ground Advantage and 6.0% for Parcel Select. The new March filing adds a temporary 8% increase to base postage prices on those same package categories, creating a second layer of change for shippers in 2026 as the Postal Service seeks to cover higher transportation costs.
For consumers and businesses that use package services, the next development is the Postal Regulatory Commission’s review ahead of the proposed April 26 start date. The Postal Service has said the temporary increase is meant to support the cost of moving packages through its nationwide network while leaving other mailing products untouched. With shipping categories now at the center of its latest pricing action, the filing places regulators’ attention on how the agency balances transportation costs, universal service obligations and competitive package operations. – By Content Syndication Services.
