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Daily printout: April 10


Friday, April 10, 2026

A sheet of stamps bearing the U.S. flag and the word “Freedom” rolls off a printing press.
The new rates will increase the price of a First-Class Mail Forever stamp from 78 cents to 82 cents.

USPS recommends new prices

The proposed changes would take effect in July

The Postal Service has filed notice with the Postal Regulatory Commission of mailing services price changes to take effect Sunday, July 12.

The new rates include a 4-cent increase in the price of a First-Class Mail Forever stamp from 78 cents to 82 cents.

The proposed adjustments, approved by Postal Service governors, would raise mailing services product prices approximately 4.8 percent.

If favorably reviewed by the commission, the price changes would include:

Letters (1 ounce): 78 cents (current), 82 cents (planned)

Letters (metered 1 ounce): 74 cents (current), 78 cents (planned)

Domestic postcards: 61 cents (current), 65 cents (planned)

International postcards: $1.70 (current), $1.75 (planned)

International letters (1 ounce): $1.70 (current), $1.75 (planned)

The additional-ounce price for single-piece letters will remain at 29 cents. The Postal Service is also seeking price adjustments for other First-Class Mail products, Periodicals, USPS Marketing Mail, Package Services and selected Special Services products.

In the midst of the severe financial crisis facing the Postal Service and continued rising operational costs, the organization is using all available tools, including available regulatory pricing authority, to ensure that it can continue to fulfill its universal service obligation and serve the American public.

The Postal Service generally receives no tax dollars for operating expenses and relies on the sale of postage, products and services to fund its operations. Even with the adjustment, the Postal Service’s mailing prices remain among the most affordable in the world.

The commission will review the changes before they are scheduled to take effect.

The complete Postal Service price filing, with prices for all products, can be found on the commission’s website under the Daily Listings section. The price tables are also available on the Postal Service’s Postal Explorer website.

Image of the Figures of the American Revolution stamps
The Figures of the American Revolution stamps feature portraits of Abigail Adams, John Adams, Agwalongdongwas, James Armistead, Cornplanter, John Dickinson, Benjamin Franklin, Elizabeth Freeman, Bernardo de Galvez, Nathaniel Greene, Alexander Hamilton, Lemuel Haynes, Patrick Henry, John Jay, Thomas Jefferson, Thaddeus Kosciuszko, Marquis de Lafayette, James Madison, Thomas Paine, Esther de Berdt Reed, Paul Revere, Deborah Sampson, Baron von Steuben, Mercy Otis Warren and George Washington.

These stamps were 250 years in the making

Latest release honors 25 Revolutionary figures

The Postal Service will release its Figures of the American Revolution stamps on Friday, April 10.

The release brings together portraits of 25 people whose vision, leadership and sacrifices helped define the American Revolution.

The honorees range from the well-known, such as George Washington, Abigail Adams and Benjamin Franklin, to those less often recognized, including James Armistead, Deborah Sampson and Cornplanter. Together, they remind us that independence was secured by the contributions of many.

Ethel Kessler, an art director for USPS, and illustrator Tim O’Brien created the pane using portraits made for the Postal Service by a dozen artists.

The sheet includes a pane of 25 stamps arranged in five rows of five on a background of the Declaration of Independence.  

The Forever stamps will be available at Post Offices and at usps.com.

The Postal Service will release the stamps through a first-of-its-kind interactive exhibition April 10-12 at the Smithsonian National Postal Museum in Washington, DC.

Email us your feedback. Your comments could be included in our “Mail” column.

Black-and-white photo of a female postal worker placing mail into a U.S. Mail collection box
Evelyn Craig’s likeness was often used in official postal photographs such as this one that now appears in Publication 100, The United States Postal Service: An American History.
People

A woman of many talents

The ‘Lady Mailman’ of the nation’s capital dies, and a Texas supervisor is honored

Evelyn Marguerite Craig, the first woman letter carrier to deliver mail in Washington, DC, since World War II, died March 26 at age 91.

Although women were temporarily appointed to deliver mail during the war because of a shortage of available men, it was not until 1963 when the Civil Service Commission ended sex discrimination that the Post Office Department hired women to also deliver mail. That year, the Associated Press reported on the trailblazing group of 125 nationwide hires dubbed “lady mailmen” and pictured Craig.

According to her obituary, the Temple University graduate was also a talented musician with perfect pitch who performed with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra.

During her lifetime, she also appeared as a contestant on the popular TV game shows “Wheel of Fortune” and “Name That Tune,” where she won a 52-day cruise to South America.

Inspection Service honors Texas employee

The Postal Inspection Service recently awarded a certificate of recognition to Kadreen Simpson, a customer services supervisor in Denton, TX, who reported a scam and ended up helping at least 18 victims targeted in an online ruse.

Simpson’s suspicions were first raised when a customer said she needed to mail a cashier’s check to her boyfriend who was stuck in Europe and needed the funds to retrieve his passport.

Simpson had also noticed an unusual number of Priority Mail Express items from throughout the country being delivered to an apartment in Corinth, TX.

She passed this information to the Postal Inspection Service, which confirmed that many of the targets believed they were sending money to online romantic partners or responding to lottery winnings claims.

Thanks to Simpson, at least 18 victims were able to recover thousands of dollars.

“People” appears regularly in Link. Got news to share? Email us.

Animated eagle and mailbox beside a postal worker with the text “Mail with Mr. ZIP”
The second season of “Mail with Mr. ZIP” will see Mr. ZIP and his friends visit France.
News Quiz

Animated adventures

How much do you know about ‘Mail with Mr. ZIP’?

“News Quiz” is a weekly feature that lets you test your knowledge of recent Link stories. The correct answers appear at the end.  

1. How many episodes of “Mail with Mr. ZIP” will air in the program’s second season?

a) 12

b) 24

c) 36

d) 48

2. Yorktown Heights, NY, Mail Carrier Christopher Perez received the top hero of the year award from the National Association of Letter Carriers for what heroic action?

a) Administering lifesaving first aid to a customer

b) Chasing down a thief who stole a customer’s purse

c) Pulling a driver from an overturned vehicle

d) Rescuing an older customer from a building fire

3. The USPS Employee Assistance Program offers which of the following services?

a) Caregiver resources

b) Emotional well-being support

c) Stress management tools

d) All of the above

4. Which of the following is not a stamp that will be released during the Boston 2026 World Stamp Show?

a) American Bison

b) Famous Mystery Novels

c) Figures of the American Revolution

d) North American Soccer

5. Real estate agent Lillie Tobash mails which of the following to enhance her business?

a) Baseball tickets

b) Coupons from local businesses

c) Scratch-off lottery tickets

d) Seeds for vegetable gardening

Answers: 1) d. 2) d. 3) d. 4) b. 5) b.

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