It's 94 cents.
If you were going to mail a letter, you needed a stamp. Sending one without it would result in postage due being affixed, and the receiver would have to pay for it. The cost of a stamp was 3 cents.
A Person Can Print Postage Online by Going to the United States Postal Service Site and Purchasing the Stamps Needed and Then Printing Them Off at Home.
Regular First Class for US and Canada , coming and going.
either 47 cents to 53 cents:]] its going up, too...
The postage depends on the weight , the thickness and the dimensions of the letter. The new rates are quite complicated, but you can consult the postal service web site and perhaps figure out your postage without going to a post office.
Yes. You use US postage to mail a letter from the US to anywhere else in the world. Take the letter to your neighborhood post office and have them weigh it. They tell you how much you have to stick on it to get where it's going, you buy the postage right there, and you leave the letter with them to go right into the tub.
The 1st class postage rate went up yesterday 1/22/12. The price to send a 1st class letter or box etc. is now 45c cents.
Typically three days. You can always get an estimate by going to USPS.com and clicking on "Calculate Postage".
44 cents is the going rate for an ordinary first class stamp.
From where? To be on the safe side, take the letter, which could be classed as a large letter or small package, to your local post office. They will weigh the letter and match the postage to the size and dimensions of the letter. Having dealt with postage issues in a British company before I retired, nobody would be pleased to receive a letter they then had to pay the excess stamp duty! Also, would the letter be going by airmail or the slower seamail?
First Class Mail has been 45 cents since 22 January 2012.
25 cents was the going rate for postage from 1988 to 1991. All the stamps from this era are still very common and have no significant value as collectibles.