New Royal Mail postage prices for April 2008

Royal Mail said today the price of a First Class stamp for a standard letter weighing up to 100g would rise 2p to 36p from April 7 2008 in line with the price controls set by the regulator, Postcomm, in 2006.

A Second Class stamp for a standard letter weighing up to 100g will rise 3p from 24p to 27p.

When the new prices take effect, Royal Mail’s stamps will still be among the very lowest priced in Europe. The average household now spends 50p a week on stamps, a fraction of the amount spent on telecoms.

Stamped mail makes an average loss of around 6p per letter and packet – and it will continue to be loss-making as the increases will not be sufficient to cover the deficit. The total loss last year on stamped mail was GBP 178 million.

Luisa Fulci, Royal Mail’s Director of Commercial Pricing and Policy, said: “For many years profits from business mail have funded stamped mail losses – but it’s getting harder all the time to maintain that subsidy as competition for business mail from rivals, electronic communications and the wider communications market is increasing while mail volumes fall.”

Business customers who use franking machines will continue to get a discount against the price of a stamp. A franked, standard First Class letter will increase by 2p from 32p to 34p in April, while a standard Second Class franked letter will rise 2p from 22p to 24p, increasing the discount for Second Class franked mail discount from 2p to 3p.

For the first time, medium-sized businesses will get discounts on volume – the more they post, the lower the postage bill.

The full details of new prices are published on Royal Mail’s web site. Prices for bulk mail will also be changing, and in some cases will fall in real terms. Some prices for heavier weight items will also be falling to improve Royal Mail’s competitiveness in the growing home-shopping market.

Ms Fulci added: “It’s crucial we do all we can to ensure postage prices reflect the costs of providing services as that’s the best way to ensure we can continue providing a one-price-goes-anywhere stamped mail service to the UK’s 27 million addresses.”

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