11-02-2024 09:27 AM
11-02-2024 10:55 AM
eBay does not provide shipping labels for First Class letters and flats (AKA Large envelopes). If your bubble envelope meets the USPS criteria to be mailed as a flat, then you can purchase postage at your Post Office, or just put stamps on it.
Among the criteria for a piece to be mailed as a flat are: it must be flexible and dimensions not more than 15 inches long, or more than 12 inches high, or more than 3/4 inch thick. Also it must be literally flat, which USPS defines as a variation in thickness not more than 1/4 inch. Details here:
11-02-2024 11:51 AM
No it has to go "Ground Advantage." That is considered a package.
11-02-2024 12:12 PM
A bubble envelope can be mailed as a flat if it meets the requirements for flexibility and evenness and is not over 3/4 inch thick.
11-02-2024 09:46 PM
Here are the USPS regulations on the "Large Envelopes Flats" category --
So pay special attention to weight, rigidity and linear measurements.
And you will need to purchase the postage for the Large Envelopes (Flats) at the post office counter -- that service is not available on eBay.
11-02-2024 09:54 PM
Your source needs updating. Postage cost for a 1-ounce flat is now $1.50.
http://pe.usps.com/cpim/ftp/manuals/dmm300/notice123.pdf
11-03-2024 05:53 AM
11-03-2024 06:18 AM
USPS Bulletins are publications with a fixed issue date; that one came out in 2007.
https://about.usps.com/postal-bulletin/2007/html/pb22218/kit1_010.html
11-03-2024 08:59 PM
But at the bottom of the bulletin it states 2023 --
"Copyright© 2023 USPS. All Rights Reserved."
11-03-2024 09:13 PM
@1786davycrockett wrote:But at the bottom of the bulletin it states 2023 --
"Copyright© 2023 USPS. All Rights Reserved."
You're fighting a losing battle on this one.
That copyright info is at the bottom of all USPS pages in a separate gray section. It's not at the bottom of the bulletin specifically. The bulletins are essentially news announcements - dated to their release.
It would be like looking at this and saying the rates are accurate today because it says copyright 2024 at the bottom of the page and ignoring the 2023 date above the news post and assuming there have been no updates since.
USPS Bulletins are dated news announcements.
Here's a USPS bulletin dated Aug 13, 2009. Should we assume these flat rates are in effect today because the bottom of the USPS website says copyright 2023? Ignore the current DMM price list?