A U.S. Postal Service employee kinds packages behind a mail truck in Los Angeles in 2020.
Kyle Grillot/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
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Kyle Grillot/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
If it continues enterprise as typical, the U.S. Postal Service is on observe to expire of money for paying its employees and distributors in a few 12 months and should should cease deliveries, Postmaster Basic David Steiner advised lawmakers this week.
The warning is the newest improvement in longstanding cash troubles at USPS — a singular federal authorities company that depends on stamps and repair charges, not tax {dollars}, to ship mail and packages six days per week to each deal with within the nation.
“I’m not certain that the American public is conscious that the Postal Service is at a vital juncture. I do know that I wasn’t conscious of the extent of it earlier than I took on this position, however at our present run charge and if we proceed to pay our required obligations in the identical method as we’ve got achieved lately, then we might be out of money in lower than 12 months,” Steiner, who joined USPS final July, stated in a written assertion launched forward of a Home Oversight subcommittee listening to on Tuesday.

Since 2007, the mailing company has been working with a monetary shortfall nearly each fiscal 12 months with fewer folks and companies utilizing first-class mail, its most worthwhile product, amid the rise of paperless billing and digital communication.
“I wish to say that within the time since peak 2006 mail quantity, the Postal Service was thrown overboard and as an alternative of tossing us a life jacket, we have been thrown an anchor,” Steiner stated, referring to what USPS has seen as burdensome rules and necessities.
To this point, its multi-year reorganization effort, which began in 2021 beneath Steiner’s predecessor Louis DeJoy, has not delivered sufficient efficiencies to stem the monetary bleeding.
USPS ended fiscal 12 months 2025 with a internet lack of $9 billion. And after ending its busiest mailing and delivery season of the 12 months in December, it lately posted its fourth quarterly loss in a row ($1.3 billion), partly as a consequence of will increase in employees’ compensation, retiree well being profit and working bills.

Mail deliveries haven’t stopped, nonetheless, as a result of USPS has been capable of borrow cash from the U.S. Treasury, whereas holding off on paying some pension obligations lately.
However USPS can tackle no extra debt beneath federal legislation, which has capped the company’s borrowing at $15 billion.
And defaulting on extra profit obligations will not be a long-term resolution, Steiner advised Congress, as a result of sooner or later, USPS “will now not be capable of keep operations within the short-term by means of such defaults, and people obligations that we can not meet must embrace funds to our staff and distributors.”
That has left Steiner to show to Congress for assist.
Among the many modifications Steiner is looking for is rising the Postal Service’s debt restrict, which has not modified since 1992, and permitting USPS to boost postage costs past the present limits. Reforming its retiree profit obligations has been one other focus of USPS officers.

At a February public assembly of the Postal Service’s governors, Amber McReynolds, who chairs the board, stated “policymakers should act urgently to handle the structural and statutory value pressures that proceed to weigh closely on our monetary future.”
Previous USPS leaders have requested lawmakers to assist the mailing company keep afloat. Most lately, Congress handed the Postal Service Reform Act of 2022, which removed a requirement for USPS to prepay future retiree well being advantages and canceled about $57 billion in past-due prefunding funds. That legislation resulted in the one fiscal 12 months up to now twenty years that USPS ended with no shortfall.
For its half, USPS is making an attempt to spice up income this 12 months by beginning to take bids from giant and small companies for particular delivery charges for its nationwide “last-mile” supply community. Some business consultants, nonetheless, say that would push Amazon and different large shippers to cease counting on the Postal Service and additional destabilize the company.
The Postal Service’s monetary struggles have additionally attracted the Trump administration’s consideration, although speak of getting the Commerce Division take over USPS, which Congress set as much as be an unbiased company, has quieted over the previous 12 months.
However President Trump is constant a push to nominate his personal picks to the company’s board of governors, whose politically appointed members are at present all nominees of former President Joe Biden. This month, Trump named three new nominees after withdrawing an earlier nomination final 12 months and having one other returned by the Senate.
Edited by Benjamin Swasey

