This is the forever stamp -- its value as postage remains at the current first class rate. Even when the rate goes up, it can still be used without additional postage.
Now it is the same as a 42 cent stamp-- after May 11, it becomes a 44-center.
This is very very common - worth about 5 cent per hundred soaked off and bundled .
Unused, you can still use it for postage. If you have a large quantity to sell, you
would do well to get 60% of face for them.
The Forever Stamp is good for regular postage on one ounce of First Class Mail FOR EVER! It's value is that of a single postage stamp. Currently it is worth .45 cents.
twenty dollars
croclaim liberty 13 cent stamp
It is a forever stamp. It is good for the current value of a first class stamp.
Forever stamps will have the word FOREVER printed on them. If the do not have a value and do not say forever, they have a fixed value.
The Liberty Bell is pictured on the Forever Stamp. They are worth the current value of a first class stamp, which is 44 cents in 2009. They can only be used for US addresses.
42 cents or the forever stamp with the liberty bell
It should also say "FIRST CLASS FOREVER". If so , the bell is the Liberty Bell and yes, these stamps are worth 44 cents at the present time. However their value will increase if first rates go up-- they will also be worth the cost of first class postage.
It is a Forever stamp and was worth 39 cents when it was first issued. It can still be used for one unit of first class mail, which is currently 45 cents.
For First Class postage, one ounce using the Liberty Bell forever stamp, 44 cents.
41 Cents
WHICH liberty bell stamp? The "forever" liberty bell stamp that's currently being sold is worth whatever first-class postage for a one-ounce letter is... as of now, that's 44 cents, but if the postage rate goes up, the stamps will still be considered full postage for a one-ounce first-class letter.
Yes. The Liberty Bell Forever stamps can be used at the current First Class rate forever... hence the name "Forever stamp". They are worth whatever the current First Class rate is. For example, the rate currently (Dec. 2010) is $0.44. The Forever stamps are worth that amount right now, even if they were purchased at a lower rate before the increase in May 2009. If the rate would happen to increase again, the Forever stamps would be valued at whatever the new rate would be, whether they are purchased before or after the increase.
Yes, it is valid for the first ounce of First Class postage always and forever.
Because the liberty bell is an old historic coin that is worth about $8.00