1st Class stamps with King Charles on the front
1st class stamps now cost £1.65 (Picture: Leon Neal/Getty Images)

The cost of a first class stamp has increased by 30p today and now costs £1.65, Royal Mail has announced.

First class stamp prices had already increased by 10p to £1.35 in April, while second class stamps rose by 10p to 85p for second class.

Second class stamps will, for now, remain at 85p.

Royal Mail said it tried to keep price rises as low as possible as it copes with declining letter volumes, inflationary pressures and the costs associated with maintaining the so-called Universal Service Obligation (USO), under which deliveries have to be made six days a week.

Postal regulator Ofcom said this week that Royal Mail could be allowed to drop Saturday deliveries for second class letters as part of an overhaul of the service.

Under plans being considered, second class deliveries would stop on Saturdays and only happen alternate weekdays, but delivery times would remain the same at up to three working days.

Ofcom said no decision had been made and it continues to review the changes.

A person posting a letter
Royal Mail said the price rise was needed to cope with a fall in letter volumes and inflationary pressures(Picture: Getty Images)

It hopes to publish a consultation early next year and make next summer.

Royal Mail said letter volumes had dropped from 20 billion in 2004/5 to around 6.7 billion a year in 2023/4.

The average household now receives four letters a week, compared to 14 a decade ago.

Meanwhile, the number of addresses Royal Mail must deliver to has risen by four million in the same period meaning the cost of each delivery continues to rise.

A Royal Mail spokesperson said its service is in need of urgent reform, adding: ‘The minimum requirements of the universal service haven’t changed for over 20 years despite major changes to how people communicate.

A Royal Mail sorting office
As part of an overhaul it’s been proposed second class post isn’t delivered on Saturdays (Picture: Bloomberg via Getty Images)

‘We have no certainty on regulatory reform and the rate of letter decline and ongoing losses means that Royal Mail has had to take the necessary steps within its power to address the very real and urgent financial sustainability challenge the universal service faces right now.’

Nick Landon, Royal Mail’s chief commercial officer, said: “We always consider price increases very carefully. However, when letter volumes have declined by two-thirds since their peak, the cost of delivering each letter inevitably increases.

‘A complex and extensive network is needed to get every letter and parcel across the country for a single price – travelling on trucks, planes, ferries and in some cases drones before it reaches its final destination on foot. We are proud to deliver the universal service, but the financial cost is significant.

‘The universal service must adapt to reflect changing customer preferences and increasing costs so that we can protect the one-price-goes anywhere service, now and in the future.’

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