In the U.S. you could never send a letter for as little as 1 cent, but the rate for postcards was 1 cent from 1898 through the end of 1951.
In the US you can buy two 10- cent stamps, four 5-cent stamps. five 4-cent stamps, ten 2-cent stamps or twenty 1-cent stamps for 20 cents at most post office windows.
The 32 cent First Class postage rate was introduced on 1 January 1995.
Yes it is still valid for 1 cent worth of postage on US mail for a domestic location.
You can purchase 1 cent or 2 cent stamps.
Depends on the face value and the numismatic value. Stamps are denominated in values from 1 cent to $1. The half-cent and quarter-cent stamps have been discontinued. Some rare 24-cent-denominated stamps cost $1 million. First-class letter will require 42 cents postage for first ounce, 17 cents for each additional ounce.
First class postage was 3 cents for the first ounce in 1940. A post card cost 1 cent.
You need one 44 cent stamp for a letter up to 1 oz. You can use any number of stamps as long as the postage total is 44 cents.
The H stamp has a value of 33 cents toward postage. The H Make-up stamps are worth 1 cent. Both are valid for postage within the US at that value.
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.
1 cent, 2 cent, 3 cent,4 cent, 5 cent, 10 cent, 17 cent, 27 cent, 41 cent, 42 cent, 59 cent,60 cent,62 cent,63 cent,72 cent, 75 cent,80 cent,84 cent,94 cent, $1,$4.80, $5, and $16.50. There are 25-cents for pre-sorted mailing by large mailers who have permits to use them.
The postage from the US for an ordinary first class letter of 1 ounce or less is 98 cents You can buy a 98-cent stamps or use any combination of stamps whose total value is 98 cents of more. 2 forever stamps plus a 10-cent stamp would work.
The US Post Office continues to make 4 cent stamps today. 4 cent stamps were issued to cover the first class rate of postage from 8/1/58 to 1/6/63.