Thursday, 23 October 2025

Has anyone seen a new NHS barcoded letter yet?

In the wake of further criticism on delays to ordinary mail Royal Mail announced in April a new solution for the more important letters from the National Health Service

The solution design provides an option for NHS providers to add a unique NHS identifier into the Mailmark barcode. Where our internal reporting shows that we are not meeting expected quality of service standards regularly, at either a local or a national level, the new NHS barcode will allow us to identify NHS mail and automate its extraction from Royal Mail sorting machines. Thereafter we will discretely handle the mail through to delivery. This will ensure NHS providers get the service they require, and patients receive their letters in a timely manner.

Customers choosing to use the NHS class identifier will need to add it to the class field in the Mailmark barcode and eManifest. This is not a new or separate service. Instead, the NHS barcode would be eligible to be printed on NHS letters using Access Priority (D+2) or Standard (D+3) Mailmark Business Mail services. The option is suitable for patient communications including appointment letters and test results.

I haven't seen any such letters yet, or had any reported, but it is now apparent that these will be handled in the same way as Special Delivery mail, according to this graphic from the Royal Mail website.

Note the original meaning of discreet - "Discrete means separate or divided. A discrete unit is a separate part of something larger."

 


Wednesday, 22 October 2025

Christmas 2025 - five stamps, MS, smaller collector sheet - issued 4 November 2025

Some readers may have seen the designs for this years 2nd class and 2nd class Large stamp designs which Royal Mail have made available to direct mailing houses for their Christmas campaigns.  Inexplicably this was done on the (publicly viewable) Royal Mail Wholesale webpage in September with the exhortation that the mailers "must treat the image as confidential until 4 November and it should not be included on any of your promotional material or website."  (They can be seen on the Commonwealth Blogspot now.)

All the usual details will be shown here - the set, the miniature sheet, and the usual collector sheet - when the Royal Mail publicity machine kicks into action on 28th October.

Set of stamps 

Miniature Sheet 

Collectors Sheet 

Retail booklets 

Digital Stamps used by Royal Mail Direct Mail customers preprinted on seasonal mailshots. 

 

Stamp Cards, Presentation Pack, First Day Covers



 

 


Is this a new label, or a very old one?

I've been using a stock of old premium services barcoded labels for many years now, some go faster than the others.  International Tracked is probably slowest of all!

My question is prompted by the latest image sent to me by our Canadian correspondent which has a different label.


All my stock has a solid colour border - green for International Tracked & Signed, orange for International Tracked, dark blue for International Signed For, etc.

The one on SS's cover has no coloured border, and the legend at the foot is all text and no graphics - but the barcode number is earlier alphabetically - RF 5821.... rather than my RN 20297 ....

At a guess I would say that this is an earlier one, rather than more recent and - because it was posted in the Southampton area and postmarked by the Mail Centre rather than a post office branch - I would say this might be from big dealer Rushstamps.


I've not seen one of these before - anyone else?

UPDATE 23 October Thanks to Tom (see comments) the source of these has been identified.

The label on the cover is identified on Royal Mail's Track & Trace webpages as a 'business label' - presumably supplied to business account customers on request.  Here are some screenshots from that page.  I still don't remember seeing any of these so I suspect not many businesses (or not many philatelic businesses) use them.



It is interesting that the more detailed ones are for post office branches, because the graphic instructions at the foot describe what is done at delivery.


Friday, 10 October 2025

Odds and ends of updates in other subjects.

A number of people wrote while we were away, so this is a short list of updates to earlier posts.

1. 1st class 1d black definitive mis-identified as Counterfeit - over on the Postal History Blog

2.  Following publication of the image of a Singapore kiosk we now have an example of the stamp dispensed from these machines - added to the annual Post & Go post.

3. Pictures of postboxes, parcel lockers, and Royal Mail transport is on the slogan postmarks etc, post. 

 


Thursday, 9 October 2025

Royal Mail muscling in on Post Office High Street business

Over the past few months we have seen he rapid expansion of Royal Mail parcel lockers and 'intelligent' post boxes.

The parcel lockers are being installed across the country, and many people have reported that their local postbox has been 'gift-wrapped in black plastic, prior to being converted to take parcels through a wider apperture. These also have solar panels on the top, would might make the siting of the attractive knitted box-toppers a thing of the past.

On our recent break I found examples of a topper in Louth (which I shall add to the 'slogan postmarks etc' post for October), but at Heath Road, Holmewood, five miles southeast of Chesterfield, I found not just a converted postbox but a new locker, about five metres from each other.
 
The locker was actually being installed when I pulled in to the layby to post a card. 
  
Job done, just have to close all these doors!

Just behind me when I took this photo was a recently converted postbox:



And to the left of that fast-food outlet you can see in the last picture, just a further 20 metres away, is a small post office.

Holmewood Post Office, Derbyshire
 

As recently as May this year, specialist property adviser Christie & Co reported the transfer of ownership:

Specialist business property adviser Christie & Co has announced the sale of Holmewood Post Office near Chesterfield, Derbyshire.

The business is a Mains post office which offers a variety of postal services to customers, as well as a small store stocking stationery equipment and convenience items. 

The store has been purchased by an established postmaster who already owns two post offices in the region and has plans to expand the convenience offering with a potential extension to the shop floor. 

Christie's said 

“The incoming owner has an excellent opportunity to extend the current building to the rear and offer a greater variety of convenience goods. Despite there being close competition on this front, the Post Office should continue to drive footfall into the store and therefore, providing that the offerings are competitively priced, there should be a rise in sales on the convenience side of the business."

I make no criticism of either Christie's or the previous owner, but I wonder if anybody knew then of Royal Mail's intention to provide facilities which will undoubtedly have an impact on the postal footfall to the business. 

Because according to Google maps, the postbox hadn't been converted in April:

Holmewood PO, Google maps April 2025, with knitted topper on postbox.

And this is not all.

Royal Mail owners IDS proudly proclaimed on 30 September.

IDS acquires stake in Collect+ to strengthen Royal Mail’s position as UK’s largest out of home parcel point network

International Distribution Services, owner of Royal Mail, has acquired a 49% stake in Collect+, marking a major milestone in the company’s multi-channel strategy to make collecting, sending and returning parcels as convenient as possible. Following the investment, almost 8,000 Collect+ convenience stores will feature  Royal Mail Shop branding.

The new high street brand will be a one stop destination for collecting, sending and returning parcels, selling Royal Mail postage at the shops for the first time and open during extended hours including evenings and weekends. Selling postage over the counter gives customers the option of paying when they get to the shop rather than doing so beforehand online. This service is now live in 500 shops and will be rolled out more widely in the coming months.

Royal Mail and Collect+ first partnered in May 2024 to meet rising consumer demand for convenient parcel drop-off and collection points. Since then, Royal Mail customers have been able to drop-off returns and pre-paid parcels at almost 8,000 Collect+ locations across the UK.

Last month, Vinted became Royal Mail’s first partner to offer its customers collection from the stores. More of Royal Mail’s retail partners will follow soon to offer collection to the shops under the new Royal Mail Shop brand.

The new Royal Mail Shop outlets will fulfil demand for face-to-face parcel services on the high street that are open for extended hours, including during evenings and weekends. They are part of Royal Mail’s rapidly expanded network of almost 24,000 Parcel Points - including 2,000 lockers, 11,500 Post Office branches, 1,200 Royal Mail Customer Service Points and 1,400 parcel postboxes – the largest multi-channel parcel network in the UK.

Sub-postmasters were quick to respond, with the National Federation of Sub-Postmasters calling the move a stab-in-the-back after the long association between Royal Mail and Post Office.  But there would seem to be little that can be done with the Competition and Marketing Authority so far silent on the matter.

I don't normally resort to using AI, but when you do a Google search an AI opinion almost always comes up.  This is what it says about collect+ effect on "post office" branches

Collect+ will have a direct, negative effect on Post Office branches by competing for parcel services, but the Royal Mail's investment in Collect+ will also lead to the rebranding of thousands of convenience stores as "Royal Mail Shops" offering similar services, including parcel drop-off and returns, potentially diverting business from traditional Post Office branches. Royal Mail will also now offer postage over the counter in these Royal Mail Shops and extended opening hours, further challenging Post Offices.   

It seems that the new Royal Mail Shops ex Collect+ will also "sell postage', but we know what that means - pay and drop.  After all, nobody wants to use multiple stamps to send their packages.   And with these shops you can use Royal Mail, Yodel, Amazon, UPS, eBay, DPD, FedEx, DHL, Parcel2Go, Inpost and others. 

Now I must get on and stamp some letters: got to make sure there's a reason for the Universal Service Obligation to send a letter anywhere in the country for 87p.  We have to use our post offices and support the sub-postmasters who have been under so much pressure for the last couple of decades.



Sadly Royal Mail have no Monopoly on pointless stamps - 10 x 1st, issue date 16 October 2025


Like Marmite, you love it or hate it.  When I was a child we often played Monopoly in the family: my grandparents had (and I still have) an early Waddington's set with the metal pieces, marked 'Patent Applied For' - it was that new!

With the wide number of board, role-playing, and electronic games now available one might have expected Monopoly to have gone the way of Totopoly or PIT which, although they still exist, almost nobody has heard of.  

But current owners Hasbro have widened the Monopoly appeal by producing multiple special and local editions, encouraging people to buy - for example - the Norwich, Prague, Grenoble, Dresden, Riyadh, and New South Wales.  I'm sure many of these get played, for a while, but I wonder how many people in the UK play any Monopoly on a regular basis.

As you can see on Wikipedia, the game has a chequered history in the USA with the original inventor being paid only $500 by Parker Brothers.  I wonder how many £200s Royal Mail will collect!

Royal Mail write:

Monopoly, one of the nation’s favourite board games, turns 90 this year, and its enduring popularity shows no signs of diminishing. The ‘fast-dealing property trading game’ originated in the US, but after securing the European licence in the 1930s, John Waddington Limited of Leeds created a brand-new version of Monopoly. 

Featuring locations from around London, the game was transformed into a truly British icon, ensuring that family gatherings would never be the same again.

Today, the game is available in more than 100 countries worldwide and has been translated into  over 40 languages. With many different themed versions to choose from, Monopoly continues to  evolve and reinvent itself, as successive generations roll the dice, ‘pass GO’ and collect £200. 

The stamps - 10 x 1st class

Row 1: Collect £200; Old Kent Road, Pentonville Road, Whitehall, Free Parking and Vine Street//Row 2: Park Lane, Liverpool Street Station, Oxford Street and Regent Street, Coventry Street, Chance.

Monopoly Collector Sheet of 10 x 1st class stamps

Technical details and acknowledgements

Hat-trick design are responsible for adapting the original images of the board.  The MONOPOLY name and logo, the distinctive design of the game board, the four corner squares, the MR. MONOPOLY name and character, as well as each of the distinctive elements of the board, cards, and the playing pieces are trademarks of Hasbro for its property trading game and game equipment. © 1935, 2025 Hasbro.

The 41 x 30 mm stamps are printed by Cartor Security Printers in lithography with PVA gum, perf 14½ x 14, in two sheets of 50 (se-tenant strips of 5).

We've been given no details for the Collector Sheet but can assume that it is printed by the same printers but on self-adhesive paper making the stamps different.

Products Available

Set of 10, Collector sheet, first day cover, presentation pack, stamp cards, 50p coin cover with either UNC cupronickel & brass (£19.99), silver proof (£75), or gold proof (£1595) coins.  

There is also a framed version of both the set and the sheet, and a limited edition playing piece in the form of a silver plated King Charles postbox for £25.

 


Tuesday, 7 October 2025

Postage Value of Older Stamps including Post and Go - October 2025 version.

This post brings previous tables up to date with the postage rates effective from 6 October 2025.

The tables are included primarily to explain the stamps used on cover, because they show that, for example, a stamp originally issued as a 30p Europe 20g stamp would later be valid for 100g and with a value of £1 in 2015 and £2.20 in 2023!

Remember that the International Rate stamps were all valid at the rates shown for inland postage, just as the 2nd, 1st, Large, Signed For, and Special Delivery stamps were all valid for inland services in addition to those shown and on international mail.

Now, of course, the old Machin and Country definitives without barcodes are no longer valid but the Post and Go stamps are as are the commemorative stamps, so the tables are still relevant for new use as well as for for Postal History purposes.

The E stamp was issued from January 1999-2004, and paid the Europe 20g rate.  This was 30p when issued and the cost but also the franking value increased periodically:

October 1999 (34p), April 2000 (36p), July 2001 (37p), May 2003 (38p), April 2004 (40p), April 2005 (42p), April 2006 (44p), April 2007 (48p).

Airmail Rates Table



Europe 20g / E‡
World 10g
World 20g
World 40g
April 2009
56p
62p
90p
-
April 2010
70p
67p
97p
£1.46
April 2011
68p
76p
£1.10
£1.65
April 2012
87p
£1.28
£1.90
April 2013
88p
£1.28
£1.88

E20/ W10
Europe 60g
World 20g
World 60g
April 2014
97p
£1.47
£1.28
£2.15

E20/ W10
Europe 100g
World 20g
World 100g
April 2015
£1
£1.52
£1.33
£2.25
April 2016
£1.05
£1.52
£1.33
£2.25
April 2017
£1.17
£1.57
£1.40
£2.27
April 2018
£1.25
£1.55
£1.45
£2.25
April 2019
£1.35
£1.60
£1.55
£2.30
April 2020
£1.42
£1.68
£1.63
£2.42

E20/ W10
Europe 100g
World 20g
World 100g
Europe Large 100g
World Large 100g
Sept 2020
£1.45
£1.70*
£1.70*
§
no NVI
no NVI
1 Jan 2021
£1.70
£1.70
£1.70
£2.55
£3.25
£4.20
4 Apr 2022
£1.85
£1.85
£1.85
£2.55
£3.25
£4.20
 3 Apr 2023
£2.20
£3.25
£4.20
 2 Apr 2024
£2.50
£3.25
£4.20
 7 Oct 2024
£2.80
£3.25
£4.20
 7 Apr 2025
£3.20
£3.50 £4.30
 6 Oct 2025
£3.40
£3.50 £4.30

All definitive and country NVI stamps without barcodes were invalidated on 31 July 2023;
Christmas and Commemorative stamps remain valid.
'E'- denominated stamp - still valid at a value of £3.40
 
Europe 20g/Worldwide 10g Post and Go stamp now valid worldwide for 100 g.


* With effect from 1 September 2020 a combined Euro 100g/World 20g Post & Go stamp was issued, priced at £1.70.
§ On the same date the World 100g stamp was replaced by two stamps: World 100g Zone 1-3 is sold for £2.50, and World 100g Zone 2 is £2.55.
 
On 1 January 2021 the pricing for all world zones was standardised, although that for large letters over 100g varied.   The Post and Go range was then consolidated to include airmail Large Letter stamps. 

Inland premium services

Note that some of the rates were in effect before the stamps were issued, and some new stamps were issued at old rates before tariff increases.

Stamps Issued ± 
 
or Rates Effective
1st Signed For 100g
1st Large Signed For 100g
100g Special Delivery
500g Special Delivery
17 November 2009 ±
£1.14
£1.36
-
-
6 April 2010
£1.15
£1.40
-
-
26 October 2010 ±


£5.05
£5.50
20 April 2011
£1.23
£1.52
£5.45
£5.90
30 April 2012
£1.55
£1.85
£5.90
£6.35
2 April 2013 §
£1.70
£2.00
£6.22
£6.95
31 March 2014
£1.72
£2.03
£6.40
£7.15
30 March 2015
£1.73
£2.05
£6.45
£7.25
29 March 2016
£1.74
£2.06


27 March 2017
£1.75
£2.08


26 March 2018
£1.77
£2.11
£6.50
£7.30
25 March 2019
£1.90
£2.26
£6.60
£7.40
23 March 2020
£2.06
£2.45
£6.70
£7.50
1 January 2021
£2.25
£2.69
£6.85
£7.65
4 April 2022
£2.35
£2.85


3 April 2023
£2.60
£3.10


Special Delivery and Signed For stamps were invalidated on 31 July 2023.

 § Royal Mail Signed For stamps were issued 27 March 2013, replacing Recorded Signed For, but were sold at old rates until 2 April. 
 
** Compensation for Signed For was reduced from £50 to £20 on this date, and compensation for Special Delivery was increased from £50 to £750.
  
Inland basic letter rates
Comprehensive tables of postage rates have been published by the Great Britain Philatelic Society and are freely available.  These and the rest of a hugely comprehensive website have been put together using members' subscriptions, so if you agree it is worth paying to join.
 
 
Please let me know by email if you spot any errors or omissions in this blog post.  
(Now edited to remove details of values of some NVIs in 2024.)

 


October postmark slogans and other interesting postal markings.

October starts (as September ended) with the unexpected slogan for the Rugby World Cup win by the Red Roses.   We still don't know the period of application, meanwhile here's an example of the slogan applied in October, thanks to Jon on Stampboards.

Update 11 October: A reader of the Postal Mechanisation Study Circle's (PMSC) Newsletter writes:

New slogan details are provided to mail centres by software updates; these are the software deployed dates, and dates when each slogan will likely be available for delivery on the "doormat".  

Slogan name / inscription - date deployed / first doormat / last doormat * dates provided were:-
Women's Rugby World Cup Winners  : 29 September/30 September/4 October
Default BHF 3 October/ 6 October/11 October
Anti-slavery 13 October/15 October/17 October
Default BHF 16 October/18 October/until further notice

*  Because the software only goes live when there is a re-set of IMP and iLSM which of course varies office to office a slogan might print on or the day after the deployed date (and is machine specific so again could vary within one mail centre).  The same situation occurs when the next slogan overrides it. 

There can be very late deployments when an instruction comes through late, and on routine slogans,  getting the slogan ready on a particular day could be at any time ahead of the day.

 

Women's Rugby World Cup slogan Southampton Portsmouth & IOW 01/10/2025.

The default British Heart Foundation slogan was back in use on 6 October; this one from Jubilee Mail Centre supplied by JH.

British Heart Foundation slogan Jubilee Mail Centre 06-10-2025

 


Update 16 October  No more examples of the Rugby World Cup slogan have been received, but RW has sent this barely legible Anti-Slavery slogan from Mount Pleasant 15 October 2025 which uses the same wording as that used in 2023.

STAMPING OUT MODERN SLAVERY
Anti-Slavery Day
18th October

antislavery.org

Anti-Slavery Day postmark slogan Mount Pleasant Mail Centre 15-10-2025

Both versions should exist!

Update 22 October.  Still only one version but MM has sent two more examples, better than the above but not great.  Jubilee on 14 October, Dorset & SW Hants on 15 October.

Anti-Slavery Day postmark slogan Jubilee Mail Centre 14-10-2025

Anti-Slavery Day postmark slogan Dorset & S W Hants Mail Centre 15-10-2025

 And the clearest one yet, supplied to RW by Mount Pleasant dated 14-10-2025

Anti-Slavery Day postmark slogan Mount Pleasant Mail Centre 14-10-2025

And lastly, thanks to JM for this version from the IMP machine at Manchester on 15/10/2025.

Anti-Slavery Day postmark slogan Manchester Mail Centre 15/10/2025
  


 

 


Other postmarks and postal markings, etc

Another counter datestamp, this one from JH is Wellswood Place Torquay, also known as Wellswood.


Wellswood (Place) Post Office, from Google maps 2024.

 

 


Postboxes etc    Some postbox and locker pictures are shown in the post on Royal Mail's expansion into the high street.  Here are some more pictures from our holiday.

1. Standard George V postbox in Mansfield Market Place.  The box, like Mansfield sadly, is badly in needed of a make-over.  You can only keep adding layers of paint for so long.


2. Two boxes from Louth, Lincolnshire.  The one with the Magic Roundabout topper is outside Louth post office in Northgate.  Sadly Ermintrude had keeled over, but other characters were upright!  The other is on the corner of Mercer Row and Market Place

Magic Roundabout's Zebedee

3. Morrisons Supermarket, Banbury and 4. Newstead Abbey south of Mansfield.


How did we manage to fit in Lincolnshire, Nottingham/Derbyshire and Buckinghamshire in one?  Well we had to leave for a family occasion part way through, which took us to Buckinghamshire.  Unfortunately our return was marred by sitting for over five hours on the M1 near Lutterworth after a serious crash.   The incident was attended by at least two fire engines, 10 police vehicles, three ambulances and the helicopter, and two National Highways Traffic vehicles. Only two cars were involved and one person was taken to hospital.
I did get the chance to talk to the veteran driver of a 36 tonne Royal Mail articulated lorry behind us. He had a new tractor unit (although someone had already pranged it) with the Charles III logo.  

 

 

 

 

 

--


Remember, slogan postmarks appearing in October will be added to this post, so check here before you spend time scanning and emailing.





 



Thursday, 18 September 2025

Temporary interruption to service

We're taking a break for a couple of weeks so there won't be anything added to the blog in that time, although I hope to be able to let appropriate comments through.

The next stamp issue after the Steam Locomotives is Monopoly on 16 October and details should be available a week before then, although all you standing order customers will get your advice notes around 16 September.  

 

Details can be posted as comments on the '2025 stamp programme' post. 

 


All aboard! Steam Railways set of 6 and miniature sheet issued 25 September 2025

Stockton-on-Tees local publicity slogan used in 1964
Although railways have featured frequently on Royal Mail stamps, special postmarks and even local slogans, this is at last something worthy of commemoration - the 200th anniversary of the Stockton and Darlington Railway, and steam locomotives in general. 


 For the new issue

"Royal Mail is proud to celebrate the evolution of British steam locomotives on the 200th anniversary of the Stockton and Darlington Railway, which officially opened on September 27, 1825. This railway is historically significant as the world’s first public railway to use steam locomotives, revolutionizing transportation and industry in Britain and beyond.

"Central to the commemoration is Locomotion No.1, the pioneering steam engine built by George and Robert Stephenson. The first steam locomotive to carry passengers on a public rail line it symbolised the dawn of the railway age. The locomotive ran on the Stockton and Darlington Railway, which connected coal mines near Shildon with the port at Stockton-on-Tees, facilitating more efficient coal transport and setting the stage for the rapid expansion of rail networks across the UK.

"This important anniversary is celebrated through a national campaign; Railway 200, which includes various events and educational initiatives celebrating the legacy of British railways and honours the technological innovation of steam locomotives whilst also highlighting their cultural and economic impact over two centuries."

The stamps

Set of 6 1st class stamps showing Steam Trains issued 25 September 2025.

The stamps show: Locomotion No 1, Rocket, City of Truro, Mallard, Duchess of Hamilton, Evening Star.

Miniature sheet 

The Miniature sheet commemorates the first steam locomotive to carry passengers on a public rail line and features historic images of Locomotive No1 through the years, including photographs from its 100 and 150 year anniversaries. 

Miniature sheet of 4 1st class stamps showing the Stockton & Darlington Railway issued 25 September 2025.

The stamps on the miniature sheet are captioned: Opening of the S&DR, 1825; Locomotion No 1 at Darlington, c 1890; Centenary of the S&DR, 1925; Replica Locomotion No 1, 1975.

[People of a certain age and from a certain part of the country know a different S&DR, that is, the Slow and Dirty Somerset and Dorset (Joint) Railway, properly known as the SDJR.] 

Technical details and acknowledgement

The 60 x 30 mm stamps, designed by Steers McGillan Eves, are printed by Cartor Security Printers in Litho with conventional gum, in se-tenant vertical pairs, perforated 14½.  The MS is 192 x 74 mm containing stamps 41 x 30 mm.  

Acknowledgements: Locomotion No. 1, Stephenson’s Rocket replica, City of Truro, Duchess of Hamilton and Evening Star © Board of Trustees of the Science Museum; Mallard photo © Jamie Lorriman/Alamy Stock Photo; background illustrations by Dave Thompson © Royal Mail Group Ltd 2025; produced under licence by SCMG Enterprises Ltd; Railway Museum™.

Painting of the opening of the S&DR by John Dobbin, 1875, Borough Art Collection © Darlington Borough Council; Locomotion No. 1 at Darlington, c.1890, British Mirror postcard © Mary Evans Picture Library; centenary of the S&DR: photograph by an anonymous photographer, from Railway Building by Cecil J Allen © Mary Evans Picture Library; replica Locomotion No. 1, 1975 © Nigel
Menzies; background images: typography taken from a share certificate of the S&DR, Hopetown Darlington © Crown copyright, licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0; engine and 11 wagons on the S&DR (detail) © The Institution of Mechanical Engineers/Mary Evans Picture Library; produced under licence by SCMG Enterprises Ltd; Railway Museum™; a special thank-you to Hopetown Darlington/Darlington Borough Council.

Products available

Set of 6 stamps, miniature sheet, first day covers (2), presentation pack, stamp cards, press sheet of 12 miniature sheets, £2 coin cover (MS), silver proof cover, gold proof cover, framed set and MS.