Follow us! >

USPS to Implement Second Phase of Service Standard Refinements

WASHINGTON, DC — The U.S. Postal Service will implement the next phase in its service standard refinements on July 1, part of the organization’s ongoing efforts to better serve customers nationwide.

Service standards indicate the expected number of days for delivery after a mail piece is accepted by USPS. In March, USPS announced service standard refinements to be implemented in two phases: April 1 and July 1. The changes will support the organization’s operational improvements and are estimated to save the Postal Service at least $36 billion during the next decade through reductions in transportation, mail and package processing, and real estate costs.

On July 1, USPS will expand:

  • The applicability of its service standard bands because of earlier surface transportation dispatch times from regional processing and distribution centers. This will increase the reach of two-, three- and four-day service standards for First-Class Mail and USPS Ground Advantage.
  • The geographic scope of “turnaround” volume, which refers to mail and package volume originating and destinating within a processing facility’s service area. Turnaround volume of single-piece First-Class Mail and USPS Ground Advantage will receive a two- or three-day service standard.

The added geographic coverage area and expansion of bands will add value for our customers.

Service standard refinements previously announced on April 1 included:

  • Adding one day to the service standard for USPS Ground Advantage, single-piece First-Class Mail and Periodicals originating in a 5-digit ZIP Code that is more than 50 miles from the nearest regional processing and distribution center.
  • New critical entry times for commercial mail acceptance, with no change to the service standard for presort First-Class Mail.
  • Arrival time by 8 p.m. at regional processing and distribution centers for collection mail and packages originating in offices within 50 miles.
  • Sundays and holidays no longer counted in service performance measurement when accepted on the day prior to Sunday or a holiday.

A fact sheet and an FAQ document providing more information on the service standard changes are available on the Delivering for America page on usps.com. Customers can also review the Service Commitments page to find the expected delivery day for postal products depending on the sender and recipient’s ZIP Codes.

Additionally, a new interactive map for customers is available at https://www.usps.com/service-standards/. This tool allows users to check service standards and expected delivery times by entering the mail class and the sender and recipient’s ZIP Codes.

Detailed file specifications for downloadable files with the new standards can be accessed on PostalPro (Service Standards | PostalPro). API specs are available now on the USPS Developer Portal (https://developers.usps.com/).

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

Mail thefts, robberies, fraud and other postal crimes – 11/06/25

Postal crimes are almost a daily event.  These are the ones we found today

CFC charity fair to be held Nov. 12

The Postal Service will host a Combined Federal Campaign Veterans Day Charity Fair on Wednesday, Nov. 12.

USPS Ditches Tyvek for Priority Mail Envelopes

"Starting November 15, 2025, the Postal Service will begin converting the material of the Priority Mail Envelope (EP14), Priority Mail Express Envelope (EP13C), and Milipac Priority Mail Envelope (MILIPAC) from Tyvek to poly (plastic)

OPM’s new blog touts modernization while retirees wait for answers during the shutdown

Despite the government’s historic shutdown, the new director’s blog posts do not address how recent retirees will be impacted by delays in retirement processing or with directions on how they should participate in the health benefits open season that will begin on Monday.

Tennessee Mail Truck Fire

This U-S Postal Service mail delivery truck burst into flames while working its route along Hooten Hows Road in Bellevue, TN.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

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