on โ17-12-2014 04:38 PM
I have 120x180x50 (all in mm) bubble padded pags. I want to ship a bracelet thats approximately 50g in weight. I know that the maximum allowed for letter delivery is 20mm in thickness. This bracelet is 19mm in thickness. How much $$ worth of stamps do I need to place on the bubble padded bag before I ship? Btw, I only own 70c stamps currently.
โ17-12-2014 10:11 PM - edited โ17-12-2014 10:14 PM
@deadlyblade21 wrote:Thankkkk you guys!! so much!
So it's 2x 70c ones ๐
Btw I do live near a post office, but I've heard that they are really strict when it comes to sending through letter delivery, and try to look for every way possible to force you to use the parcel delivery service, although the item is clearly well suited for letter delivery. So I wanted to do it on my own, using those red boxes. Anyway thankks guys ๐
If the package is more than 20mm in height, even though you have posted it with enough stamps to cover letter rate, you could still get an underpaid postage notice.. requiriing the difference between what you paid and $7.20 (parcel rate) plus a $1.50 admin fee.
Just because you stick mail direct in the PO Mailing boxes doesn't mean they aren't checked for weight and height, correct postage is attached further down the track.
I don't find the PO staff strict, they do what they are paid to and that is to follow the postal charges regulations.
on โ17-12-2014 10:14 PM
I use printed address labels. I bought a small Label writer machine with software, this year (which prints labels one at a time, not like using sheets of labels inserted in a normal printer).
โ17-12-2014 10:38 PM - edited โ17-12-2014 10:41 PM
Oh dear the posting poster police have arrived ....
I find most of the Post Office staff I have dealt with over the years great, but my goodness there are some that are clearly in the wrong job and are very unhelpful.
on โ17-12-2014 10:42 PM
Strict ?
It depends on which po you go to.
One near me is by the book, whichever is higher in price.
The other one is flexible as far as they can.
on โ17-12-2014 11:36 PM
This is how i work out my costs:
auspost.com.au/apps/postage-calculator.html
Works for pretty much everything. and you can work out which postage options are cheapest for your particular item. This would show you:
Large Letter
Up to 260mm x 360mm x 20mm and up to 125g
costs $1.40
Provided your bag is within the dimensions, it usually counts as a letter. Just keep the braclet flat.
โ18-12-2014 12:15 AM - edited โ18-12-2014 12:18 AM
Maybe particular customers attitudes irks them and and they have a momentary lapse into unhelpfulness and then appear to be in the wrong job.
I got an underpaid notice for an item I posted in a padded bag, which must have been about 1mm to high, so they can get checked after they are placed in a street side box. (it's was a very light item, wouldn't have exceeded the postage rate on the bag)
on โ18-12-2014 12:32 AM
@aps1080 wrote:
Don't know exactly but I posted a DVD the other day for $1.86 as a letter in one of those white padded bags.
That was 125 to 250 gm
Why $1.86? That's a rather strange amount to be paying for stamps to go on a large letter.
Most single DVDs come in at around 118g and can be sent in a PB1 padded bag for $1.40.
However, double DVDs exceed 125g by a few grams and you need to use 3 stamps (i.e. $2.10).
Incidentally, you can send 2 x DVDs (single or double) in a PB2 with 5 stamps for a total of $3.50.
on โ18-12-2014 05:07 AM
I tried to reply to this and it did not "take" - have I been naughty?
on โ18-12-2014 06:03 AM
on โ18-12-2014 08:11 AM