Blog Reference Pages

Friday, 27 November 2015

New arrangements and charges for underpaid and unpaid mail

Until 1983 mail on which the postage was not paid, or was underpaid, was subject to a surcharge equal to double the normal postage, and postage due stamps were applied.  From 5 April 1983, the shortage was charged, plus a fee representing a penalty which was supposed to reflect the cost to Royal Mail of collecting the underpayment.   This fee started at 10p and gradually rose to £1 by May 2003.  The use of postage due stamps to collect the sums due stopped in 1994, not long after new 'To Pay' stamps were issued.

A new system started on 5 October 2015. The Royal Mail press release explained that:
Royal Mail is introducing a simpler flat-rate charging structure for letters and parcels where insufficient postage or no stamps have been attached. The changes are designed to reduce delays in processing underpaid mail and minimise inconvenience for customers. Even with these changes, surcharge fees will not fully meet the cost to Royal Mail of handling mail where the appropriate postage has not been attached.
From Monday 5 October 2015, Royal Mail will introduce a flat-fee of only £1.50 to be paid by the recipient of a letter or a large letter where insufficient postage has been paid. This fee will be £2 when no stamp has been attached. A £3 fee will apply to a Small Parcel with insufficient postage or no stamp attached.
For Medium Parcels and Special Delivery Guaranteed items with incorrect or no postage, a fee of £1.50 plus the postage due, rounded to the nearest 10 pence, will apply.
Under the new process, items which incur a surcharge will spend less time in our system whilst the surcharge is calculated, meaning customers will receive these items more quickly.
Recipients can still pay a surcharge by debit or credit card online via the Royal Mail website. Alternatively, they can pay in cash at the delivery office or by affixing the fee in stamps or a franking machine impression on the “fee to pay” card Royal Mail leaves with the customer.  Royal Mail is also looking at other payment options to make it even easier to receive underpaid letters and parcels.
Also this year, a new system of handling and identifying surcharged items has been introduced in delivery offices.  This did not occur at the same time, as an example has been reported as early as April 2015, but that may have been a limited area trial.

The system involves a numbered white label being attached to the surcharged mailpiece (see right), with a similar label attached to the grey 'Fee to Pay' card (P4605) which is delivered.

The label is 99 x 49mm.  I assume SU = Surcharge, and that a similar label with a different identifier is used for payment of Customs Duty and VAT.  (CD?)

Apparently when the addressee takes the card to the delivery office, the number allows for the easy retrieval of the item that has been held.  On Royal Mail's 'Pay a fee' webpage, after entering details of the address, amount to pay, etc, this box appears:


After Postage Due stamps were abandoned in 1994, various means were used to identify surcharges, including continuing with the multiple-reason tick-box rubber stamp, to yellow Revenue Protection labels which indicated the underpayment and the fee.  Obviously once the label system started they had to be reprinted every time the fee was changes, and while there were pre-printed labels for the most used values (total non-payment of 27p, 30p, 32p, 36p for example - the 2nd class rate was always assumed for standard letters) there were labels which had to be completed in manuscript.

All these could have been collected as part of a Postage Due 'Stamp' collection, but as Martin (who provided the pictures*) suggested, these fixed-value labels are closer to traditional Postage Due Stamps.

* Our customers, of course, never underpay their letters to us, so we haven't yet received any of these!


Also reported, but not formally announced, there appears to be a new policy regarding underpaid greetings cards.   Despite the  Pricing in Proportion system being introduced in August 2006, Royal Mail receives a lot of bad press at key times of the year - Christmas, Mother's Day, Valentine's Day, Easter, and Father's Day - because many customers post Large Letter-sized cards with only basic letter stamps.  The popular press persists in supporting the errant customers - even though many card manufacturers print a size-indicator on the back of cards - with headlines such as  
"Royal Mail wouldn't deliver my mother's card and charged her £1.10 for delaying it!"
Now it seems that these people have won, and Royal Mail will no longer surcharge underpaid cards - but unpaid cards will still be surcharged. Again, we don't have any evidence of this yet, and the only Christmas cards we have received so far (well, it is still November!) had the correct postage.


9 comments:

  1. Hello. Are there any information about undercharged mail to international destinations?

    During the 2000-2010 period, I saw two postcards franked with 1st class stamps although sent to France. Both were delivered without charge by the French post. The delay was explained by Royal Mail either by a large round cancellation in 2001 and the other in 2007 by a peelable sticker on the picture side of the card.

    The messages seemed to imply a cheaper route than airmail or method were used (maybe: here is the bag of underpaid international mail, we'll process it when full?).

    ReplyDelete
  2. The Delivery Office label here would appear to be produced by the same system used for mail undelivered because there was nobody home to receive it. It seems that mail is logged in the system along with its location in the office, and a similar label attached - the idea presumably being that it's quicker to locate items. (Unless the office's internet connection goes down, as has happened twice at my local office recently when I've been to pick something up - they deal with this scenario by closing the front door and telling people to go away)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Some mail marked international economy (surface mail) has been returned to the sender because of insufficient postage for airmail!

    I used to put my return address on an envelope - but one was returned because of insufficient postage - they didn't check the front of the envelope!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Examples would be interesting to show?

      Delete
    2. http://www.fountainpennetwork.com/forum/topic/295649-postage-problems/ - post #20, last shown on the first page, has a link to a dropbox photo - not mine.

      Delete
    3. Oh, that is crass; should never have changed the name from Surface. I sense another blog post coming on.

      Delete
    4. The sticker there appears to be an old one - I don't think Royal Mail use that serif font wordmark anymore, and the 0845 phone number has been replaced by an 0345 one. I assume the mail centre is using up old stocks.

      Delete
  4. I think when sending mail internationally, it is more expensive to collect the missing postage from the receiver, therefore they rather just mail it back to sender. I once received (I think in 2013) a letter from England, which had only a 1st class stamp, and it took a month and a half to arrive to Slovenia. Royal Mail put a sticker on the back of an envelope stating that because of insufficient postage, it might take longer for mail to arrive.

    Another matter, which is not right on the topic: I was unpleasantly surprised when I have not received cards, which I had sent to London SHC for postmarking in September--because I put 1st class stamps onto the cards, I enclosed a self-addressed envelope WITH sufficient postage (two 1st class stamps). I understood that I only need to put 1 GBP stamps to cards if I do NOT pay for return postage. But in this case, I had. And the SHC returned me only the envelope--EMPTY envelope. NO CARDS! And the empty envelope was bearing a ST Paul's Cathedral's postmark--like they wanted to tell me, that they burried the cards...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi AJ
      If you don't have an email address for Special Handstamps, email me at the address at the top of the page, and I'll let you have them.
      Ian

      Delete

Thank you for reading the blog and commenting: please use an identity (name or pseudonym) rather than being Anonymous; it helps us to know which 'anonymous' comments are from the same person to avoid confusion. Comments are moderated to avoid spam, but will be published as soon as possible.