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.
The H rate stamps were issued in 1998. The make up stamp has a face value of 1 cent.
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.
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.
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.
Yes. The H series stamps are only worth 33 cents. You need to add enough postage to total the current rate.
H make up rate stamp is valued at 1 cent. They were made because they didn't know if the rate increase would be 1 or 2 cents. The 'Make Up Rate' stamp was designed to be used with the existing 1st Class stamps.
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 new rate for the H stamps was 33 cents, up from 32 cents. So the face value was one cent.
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 G rate dove stamp was issued in 1995 when postage went from 29 cents to 32 cents. The make up rate stamp can still be used for 3 cents of postage.
The F rate tulip stamp was issued in 1991 when postage went from 25 cents to 29 cents. The make up rate stamp can still be used for 4 cents of postage.
The standard First Class postage rate was 32 cents.
As of 2016, the rate dropped to 47 cents.