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44 cents as of 2009
Whatever it says on it. There have been several "American flag stamps".If it says "Forever" rather than a monetary value, then it's worth whatever the first class letter rate for 1 ounce is at the moment.
There were many of these notes taken to the post office to get a stamp and a first day cancel seal -- they are not rare. In a nice holder, it has a retail value of $3 to $4.
I believe they are 41 cents. I just had the same dilemma. How dumb not to put the value on the face of a stamp!!!
The Indiana stamp on it does not increase the value, in fact, if the coin had some numismatic value prior to being stamped the addition of the stamp would decrease the value. If it is just a common date penny I would just spend it or you can keep it. There may be a value for it in maybe, 300 years.
A first-class stamp is not the same as a forever stamp. A forever stamp holds the value of a first-class stamp regardless of how often the rate for first-class postage has increased. A first-class stamp only holds its face value.
It is a forever stamp. It is good for the current value of a first class stamp.
That is the F stamp and came out in 1991. It has a face value of 29 cents.
That stamp was issued in 2005. It has a face value of 25 cents.
First Class is 44 cents
A first class stamp is 44 cents as of 2010.
4cents
On 12 May 2008 the First Class Postage Rate was increased to 42 cents.
44 cents as of 2009
A US first class stamp dated 2002 is worth face value only, and it's still valid now.
A postcard stamp looks like a first class stamp, only it has a smaller value. The size of the stamp is one inch by one inch.
They are not the same stamps. The ones maked First Class were for a specific postal rate, you would have to specify which one. The FOREVER stamps are valid at the first class rate regardless of what it is.