Buyers typically pay a base rate for a 1-ounce letter, with each extra ounce adding a separate charge. The main cost drivers are weight, mail class, and destination. This article outlines current price ranges and practical budgeting estimates for additional ounce postage in the United States.
| Item | Low | Average | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base 1-Ounce Letter (First-Class) | $0.66 | $0.66 | $0.66 | Standard baseline; used for context |
| Each Additional Ounce (First-Class, Letter) | $0.24 | $0.24 | $0.24 | Widely cited per-ounce increment |
| Nonmachinable Surcharge / Special Handling | $0.00 | $0.00 | $0.00 | Possible extra fee for nonmachinable letters |
| Total for 2 Ounces (First-Class) | $0.90 | $0.90 | $0.90 | Base + 1 additional ounce |
| Total for 3 Ounces (First-Class) | $1.14 | $1.14 | $1.14 | Base + 2 additional ounces |
Overview Of Costs
Cost components for sending an additional-ounce letter include the base rate for the first ounce, the per-ounce increment for each extra ounce, and potential handling fees. For reference, a standard 1-ounce First-Class letter currently costs the base rate, with each extra ounce adding a fixed amount. This section summarizes total project ranges and per-unit estimates with brief assumptions. Assumptions: U.S. domestic, standard letter size, no special services.
Cost Breakdown
In a typical mail job, the price components break out as follows:
| Materials | Labor | Equipment | Permits | Delivery/Disposal | Warranty |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Included in postage | Not applicable | Not applicable | None | Included in mail class | None |
What Drives Price
Weight per ounce and destination are the primary price levers. The heavier the item, the more ounces are billed. Domestic mail within the same class follows a fixed per-ounce scale, while international mail or nonstandard shapes can incur additional charges. Per-unit pricing is useful when budgeting bulk mailings or irregular-sized letters.
Ways To Save
Strategies to reduce postage cost include consolidating content to stay within 1-ounce increments, using standard letter formats to avoid nonmachinable surcharges, and grouping mailings to benefit from bulk-rate considerations where applicable. Consider postal discounts for mailers that meet automation compatibility and electronic documentation requirements.
Regional Price Differences
Prices can vary slightly by region due to local processing costs. In practice, most domestic First-Class letter rates are uniform nationwide, but regional volume discounts or mail-handling practices can create small deltas. For budgeting, assume minor regional variation within ±5% of the base per-ounce increment.
Real-World Pricing Examples
Three scenario cards illustrate typical outcomes:
- Basic — 1 oz letter to a nearby ZIP, no extras: 1 oz base $0.66; total $0.66.
- Mid-Range — 2 oz letter with standard content, single extra ounce: base $0.66 + $0.24 = $0.90; total $0.90.
- Premium — 3 oz letter with standard content, potential nonmachinable considerations, no special services: base $0.66 + 2×$0.24 = $1.14; total $1.14.
Assumptions: region, specs, labor hours.