Contact the sender with you new address and fill out a change of address card at the Post Office.
If you're already in your new address' city, you could rent out a Post Office box and use that as your forwarding address. Another option is to submit a hold mail request, which would hold the mail until it is picked up. A third option is to forward the mail to a general delivery, but the local post office should be contacted for more information on their general delivery policy. This is a link to the hold mail form on the USPS website: https://dunsapp.usps.gov/HoldMail.jsp
If a person receives a piece of certified mail to an old address and they have set up mail forwarding with their local postal service, yes, the USPS will forward this mail onto their new address.
Take a tip from Elvis Presley: RETURN TO SENDER. In other words, write on the envelope, without opening it, the words above, followed by MLNFA. (this stands for Moved, Left No Forwarding Address) then give it back to the mail carrier to be returned to sender.
Do a change of address form with the post office and let everyone else that is impotant to you know your new address. Thats what I would do.
You can report it to the police because it's illegal. And put in a request to change your address.. They should stop mailing your mail right away to the old location..
My method was to write, "Return to sender: not at this address" on the mail, and put it back in the mailbox for the mail carrier to pick up and take.Added: Or go to the local Post Office from which your mail carrier operates and speak to the Counter Clerk or Postmaster.
any age.
My method was to write, "Return to sender: not at this address" on the mail, and put it back in the mailbox for the mail carrier to pick up and take.Added: Or go to the local Post Office from which your mail carrier operates and speak to the Counter Clerk or Postmaster.
* In Canada (should not vary in the U.S.) if you don't notify your friends or family of your new address and mail comes to you (including USPS) they return the mail (including packages) to the sender and not put your new address on it because they are only a delivery service and not related to the phone companies (phone book). It would be wise of you to get a Box number for your mail and pick it up yourself.
If you have to transfer our new mails, you can do it by Forwarding. If old mails then, import them into new one. Take a backup and then import them into new one.
This old friend of mine, "old"(use to be, but not anymore) keeps going to jail and putting my address as his home address, he does not live here and im tired of getting mail addressed to him. how do i make this stop? Any info would be great!! Thanks Richard Head
...from a Gmail help article:Moving mail from another account to GmailThere are three ways to move your mail from another account to Gmail: forwarding mail, importing mail, and fetching mail. Regardless of which way you use, we suggest creating filters and labels in Gmail to help organize this mail. Select an option below to learn more about moving mail, and to see which method will work best for you.Transfer existing mail and/or contacts to Gmail:If you're switching to Gmail from another email provider, importing contacts and messages from your old email account can help you make the transition without having to do a bunch of housekeeping. You can also have new mail sent to your old email address automatically imported to your Gmail account for the next 30 days. Please note that this doesn't establish a permanent connection between the accounts. If you want to connect two accounts permanently, you should use Mail Fetcher.Transfer existing mail to Gmail, and check for new messages regularly (Fetching):Gmail's Mail Fetcher can download messages from up to five other email accounts on a regular basis, centralizing all your email in Gmail. If your other webmail account offers POP3 access, you can configure Mail Fetcher in Gmail and automatically download all your other mail to Gmail. In a short amount of time, this will download all of your existing messages to Gmail, and will regularly check your other account for new mail. You'll need to contact your other webmail provider to determine whether or not they support POP3 access, and for instructions on enabling it.Transfer new mail to Gmail (Forwarding):If your other webmail provider supports auto-forwarding, you can set your Gmail address as the forwarding target. This will only forward mail that arrives from now on. You'll need to contact your other webmail provider to determine whether or not they support auto-forwarding, and for instructions on enabling it.