Nothing happens, the letter will still be mailed. You just overpaid for it.
Thank you for your contribution to the operating budget of the United States Postal Service.
Nothing happens
pay more for it
1 if it weighs no more than an ounce.
Any stamp or stamps adding up to 42 cents if the letter is a normal size and does not weigh more than 1 ounce. www.usps.gov
It depends on the weight of the letter, not where it's going.. The rule I use it, Less than 5 pages one stamp. If the letter is 5 pages or more be safe and use 2 stamps.
For a letter of no more than 3 to 6 pages, just one first-class stamp.
The amount of stamps depends on your location. It will take more stamps to send a letter to England from the United States than from Italy.
If you envelope weighs less than one ounce, it will take one forever stamp or one current first class stamp. If the letter and envelope weigh more than one ounce, the number of stamps will depend on the weight and the denomination of the stamps.
The rate is 98 cents for an ordinary letter. You can buy 98-cent stamps, but any combination of valid US stamps that 98 cents or more will work, eg two 44's plus a 10-center.
Couple of 98c stamps, can be more is heavy
We would need more information than, that, such as where you are, (city, state, country), and where Wilshier Blvd is, (city, state, country).
$1.05 = Forever stamps are worth 45 cents each. so a little more than two of these stamps
For a letter weighing no more than one ounce, which would be about 1 to 6 pages, one first class stamp is needed. As of July 2009, they are 44 cents each in the US.
One stamp if it's a normal letter. If its heavy, or is excessively large it'll require more stamps.