Yes, many 13 cent stamps have been issued. They are currently not available through the post office.
In the US they are still valid for 13 cents worth of postage. As long as they add up to the current rate, they can be used.
A first class stamp in 19777 was 13 cents. A postcard was 9 cents.
91 cents or 3 stamps of 44 cents ea.
Three 44- cent or forever stamps will work, but the postage is only 98 cents- you would wasting 34 cents. You can buy 98-cents stamps or 10-cent stamps at the PO.
In the US the official First Class rate was 15 cents beginning May 29, 1978. It stayed at that rate until it went to 18 cents in March of 1981. Any additional ounces were 13 cents.
First class stamps were 22 cents in 1986. A post card would cost 14 cents.
On May 11, 2009 , ordinary first class stamps went up to 44 cents.
No they are not Forever stamps. They were issued in 2006 and have a value of 39 cents.
In the U.S. Postal Stamps are 42 cents each
It has a face value of 32 cents for the stamps. The G rate stamps were issued in 1995 when postage went from 29 cents to 32 cents.
For a standard size envelope it is 44 cents.
The US domestic rate for an ordinary 1st-class letter was 13 cents in 1976.
No. Postage to Ireland from the US is 98 cents, but only 44 cents for domestic letters.