Follow us! >

New USPS Address Change Policy: What You Need to Know

You must verify your identity to the USPS to activate an address change request.

The basics of filing a change of address form with the USPS haven’t changed. However, the USPS has added an additional step to the process to verify your identity. How you verify your identity will depend on how you filed your COA. And your COA is only activated after your ID has been verified.

If you are unable to verify your identity online or in person, you will be unable to activate a USPS change of address. If this is the case, the USPS suggests you directly notify your various creditors and organizations of the address change. You don’t want to leave behind any sensitive or critical identifying information.

Online filers will incur a $1.10 charge and will need a valid mobile phone number. If you go in person to change your address, you will need a valid photo I.D. and it’s recommended that you bring a second form of identification that includes your old or new address.

Sign up to receive our Daily Postal News blast

Related Articles

Tell us what you think below!

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Hot this week

USPS-Amazon contract uncertainty grows as reverse auction plan raises stakes for 2026 renewal

With the existing contract between global e-commerce retailer Amazon and the United States Postal Service set to expire in October 2026, media reports published yesterday indicated that there could be some shifts coming in that relationship.

Regional Transportation Optimization ends evening collections at nearly 12,000 post offices

Over the past two years, the Postal Service has been quietly eliminating the evening collection of mail at thousands of post offices.

USPS Winter Weather Update

Due to Winter Storm Bellamy sweeping across the country this week, the Postal Service is experiencing transportation and delivery impacts in some regions.

In praise of the handwritten Christmas card

We’ve all come to dread checking the mail. And not just when property taxes are due.

USPS electric vehicle fleet behind schedule with $3B in taxpayer funds spent — and only 612 trucks built

The US Postal Service’s promised all-electric fleet is still woefully behind schedule, with more than $3 billion in taxpayer funding out the door and just 612 of the expected 35,000 battery-powered delivery trucks built
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img
Secret Link
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x