Why 2026 Is the Year Personal Mailers Need to Think Differently About Stamps

2026-05-05

Why 2026 Is the Year Personal Mailers Need to Think Differently About Stamps

James Wilson December 30, 2025 7 min read


If you're someone who still sends real mail — the kind you touch, seal, and send with a tiny moment of intention — then 2026 is going to be a year you feel in your wallet. And maybe in your chest a little too.

Because something is shifting.
Not dramatically. Not overnight.
But steadily, like a slow tide that keeps rising even when you're not looking.

And if you're the kind of person who mails 200 thank‑you notes a year, or 150 holiday cards, or — God bless you — 300 wedding invitations in one chaotic season… then you already know stamps aren't "just stamps." They're part of your ritual. Part of your identity. Part of how you show up for people.

But here's the thing nobody really says out loud:
The cost of showing up is getting higher.

And that's why the conversation around discount Forever Stamps suddenly matters more than it ever did before.


The Price of a Stamp Is Quietly Becoming a Bigger Deal Than People Realize

Let's start with the obvious: USPS raised the Forever Stamp price to 78 cents in July 2025.
They've already announced there will be no price increase before July 2026 — you can see it in their own update here.

But after July?
Every analyst watching USPS operations expects another increase.
Not because USPS is "bad" or "greedy," but because inflation, labor costs, and transportation costs are still high.

Some experts expect:

  • 83 cents in late 2026
  • 88 cents in 2027
  • 93 cents in 2028

No drama. No panic.
Just math.

USPS Forever Stamp Price Trend 2007-2028 with Future Projections

Best Deals on Forever Stamps

The Emotional Side of Mailing That People Don't Talk About Enough

There's something almost sacred about sending mail.
You sit down, you write, you fold, you seal.
You think about the person on the other end.

It's slow.
It's intentional.
It's human.

And maybe that's why rising stamp prices feel… personal.

"I don't even think about the cost until I'm at the counter buying stamps. Then I'm like… wait, how did this get so expensive?"

Discount USPS US Flag 2025 Stamps

Let's Talk About the Math (Because Feelings Don't Pay for Postage)

Imagine you send 200 pieces of mail a year:

Year Price per Stamp Total Cost
2025 $0.78 $156
2026 $0.83 (expected) $166
2027 $0.88 (expected) $176
2028 $0.93 (expected) $186

That's a $30 increase over a few years for the exact same letters.

Now imagine you're planning a wedding in 2026 or 2027.
You're mailing 300 invitations.

At 78 cents → $234
At 93 cents → $279

Same envelopes.
Same guest list.
Same love.
More money.


Why Buying Stamps Early Is Becoming a Form of Self‑Care

I know that sounds dramatic.
But hear me out.

There's a moment — maybe you've had it — when you're sitting at your kitchen table surrounded by envelopes, and you realize you're out of stamps. Again. And the post office is closed. Again.

Buying stamps early isn't just about saving money.
It's about saving your future self from that moment.

White Wedding Roses Forever Stamps

A Quick but Important Warning About Fake Stamps

This part matters more in 2026 than ever.

Counterfeit stamps are everywhere now — especially on marketplaces and "discount" apps.
If you see:

  • 50% off
  • Buy 100 for $20
  • "USPS Forever Stamps Sale!"

…on Temu, Shein, random Facebook ads, or unknown sellers?

They're fake.
Not "maybe fake."
Not "possibly fake."
Fake.

USPIS Forever Stamps Warning

Why 2026–2028 Will Be the Most Important Years for Stamp Buyers

If you know you'll be mailing things anyway —
If you know you'll send 200 cards, or 300 invitations, or 500 letters —
Then buying stamps early is one of the few things you can control.

So What Should You Actually Do in 2026?

Here's the simplest, most human advice I can give you:

Buy your stamps before July 2026.
Buy enough for the year.
Buy a little extra for the unexpected moments.

And buy them from a source you trust.

Because the cost of caring is rising.
But the value of caring hasn't changed.


James Wilson
Stamp enthusiast and part-time columnist based in Chicago. With a background in logistics and a passion for collecting Forever Stamps, he provides readers with practical tips on buying, storing, and using stamps effectively.