Yes, you can mail a 2 ounce letter with that much postage and be paying more than you should.
In a standard size envelope, as of June 2009, you need 75 cents in stamps to mail an envelope up to 1 ounce to Canada. You could use two 44 cent stamps (you would be paying too much) or you can buy 75 cents of stamps at a post office. You need an additional 25 cents worth of stamps for each additional ounce or fraction of an ounce. Letters over 3.5 ounces have different rates.
If it just a letter, just one is fine no matter where you send it from and where the ending destination is located. But I think it cannot exceed a certain weight. If you are concerned about it put two stamps on the envelope and mail it out.
Yes, according to the USPS "Frequently Asked Questions" site:Can Forever stamps be used for international mail?Customers can use Forever stamps for international mail, but since all international prices are higher than domestic prices, customers will need to attach additional postage. The value of the Forever stamp is the domestic First-Class Mail one-ounce letter price in effect on the day of use.http://faq.usps.com/eCustomer/iq/usps/request.do?create=kb:USPSFAQ&view%28%29=c[c_uspsse10242011]&varset%28source%29=sourceType:embeddedSince "forever" stamps (as of Jan 2012) are worth 45 cents, and mail to Canada costs 85 cents (as of Jan 2012), you can use two "forever" stamps on the mail to send it to Canada.
Yes. But that's more postage than a standard letter is worth. You can add small-denomination stamps to bring the total up to whatever the first class rate is when you use the old stamps. First class stamps in 2006 (Lady Liberty with a US flag backdrop, or two blue lovebirds on a yellow background) were worth 39 cents.
It depends on the weight of the letter/package.
You need 3 stamps, two 44 cent ones, and a 10 cent one to make up the 98 cent requirement.
Postage is 98 cents for a standard letter from the US. You can buy a 98-cent stamps or use any combination that totals 98 cent or more. For example two forever stamps plus a 10-cent stamp. If all you have is forever stamps, you would have to use three of them.
Both are in the U.S. You need first class U.S. postage.How many stamps is that? One 42-cent stamp. Forty-two one-cent stamps. Four ten-cent stamps and one two-cent stamp. One 25-cent stamp and one 17-cent stamp.
Yes, but that would be foolish. Buy some one-cent stamps to make up the 42 cent postage and save those 41 cent stamps.
Two 37 cent stamps (assuming that the letter doesn't weigh more than an ounce). But as you only need to put one 41-cent stamp on the letter, you could go buy some 2-cent stamps and save yourself some money.
"As long as it weighs less than two ounces, yes it is fully acceptable." Although, you're wasting money. Better to just buy 1cent and 2cent stamps and add them up to make the difference.
Assuming your sending it in the United States, two 44 cent stamps in a regular envalope (not padded) should do the job.
For a regular letter, two.
2
The cost is 98 cents. You could use two 44 cent stamps plus a 10 cent stamp. You can buy a 10 cents or a 98 cent stamp at the post office. If all you have is 44 cent stamps, you would have to use three.
Lucky you.
If you mail a letter without the extra $0.02 stamp or with two $0.39 stamps it will gladly come back to you!!!