The value of the "H" Rate First Class stamp is 33¢ as per official United States Post Office information. The "H" Rate Make Up Rate stamp is 1¢. Check for the additional wording so that you know which one you have.
The H stamp shows a picture of a top hat on it. It has a face value of 33 cents and can still be used for that value.
The H stamps were issued when the rate went from 32 to 33 cents. The make up stamp would be worth 1 cent. The First Class rate stamp would cost the full 33 cents.
The H stamp is worth 33 cents. Yes, you can add a 1 cent stamp to cover 34 cents worth of postage.
Yes you can use an "H" makeup stamp as postage as long as it is not cancelled or being reused. FYI an H stamp is worth 33 cents but a H makeup stamp is only worth 1 cent.
These sold for 33 cents and are still worth that amount as postage. You can only use them for postage for destinations inside the US.
From pe.usps.com they have pictures of the stamps. An H rate stamp with a HAT is worth 33 cents, and an H rateMAKE-UP stamp with a picture of a Rooster is worth 1 cent. Please look for yourself.
The H stamp has a value of 33 cents toward postage. The H Make-up stamps are worth 1 cent. Both are valid for postage within the US at that value.
Yes. The H series stamps are only worth 33 cents. You need to add enough postage to total the current rate.
The H stamp is worth 33 cents in postage. The US has never de-valued their postage stamps. In the US, they are still valid for postage at their face value.
It was issued on November 19, 1998. The H make up stamp had a face value of 1 cent. It can still be used for one cent worth of postage.
The H series First Class Stamp is still valid for 33 cents worth of postage. So you would have to add 12 cents to it to mail a letter in 2012.
Scott Number 3260. These are the first class stamps. They have a face value of 33 cents. They are still valid for postage within the US for 33 cents.
The "H" rate makeup stamp is worth one cent US. It was used with the pre-rate change 32 cent stamp to make the new 33 cent cost of a first class letter.
Price, when issued in 1999, was 33 cents See (scroll to bottom) : http://alphabetilately.com/G.html KDC