It depends on tne weight of the envelope not the size.
You would have to use 2 stamps to get a small envelope from Florida to Canada. If you do not want to use stamps, you can take it to the post office and it will cost roughly 72 cents to mail it.
For an envelope that weighs 5 ounces, you would need 5 Forever stamps. Forever stamps are typically for 1-ounce letters, so you would need to use multiple stamps to cover the additional weight.
THe cost is $2.03 for first-class, large envelope, not more that 1/4 inches thick. Five forever stamps would overpay by 42 cents, but would work.
At that weight, it would be classified as a large envelope, and postage would be $2.20 as of 2016.
They are still valid as 20 cents worth of postage. You would have to add additional stamps to the envelope to meet the correct rate.
Take your envelope to the Post Office and they will weight it, and give you your answer as the cost of mailing anything is done by weight.
As of June 10, one ounce of first class mail is 44¢. Every additional ounce is 20¢. So, a six ounce envelope would cost $1.44 to mail, or four forever stamps.
Depends on a few facts. 1.) The weight of the letter combined with the weight of the envelope! 2.) The shape of the envelope. 3.) The denomination of the stamps......i.e. $0.01 stamps, $0.05 stamps, $0.42, etc. (all USD). 4.) The chemical composition of your saliva (spit) for licking the envelope. For example, if a #10 envelope weighs less than 0ne(1) once, the cost would be $0.42 USD. The number of stamps (you asked "How many") would be 42 if you used $0.01 stamps, all the way up to only 1 stamp if you used a $0.42 stamp This site will explain everything from size to weights. http://www.usps.com/welcome.htm Good luck!
As of 2016, a 2.5 ounce envelope it would cost 93 cents (one Forever stamp plus two extra ounces).
The three envelopes can be mailed using three 24c stamps and three 17c stamps, one of each on each envelope. What would you need if you just used one stamp on each envelope instead of two? 3(24 + 17) = 3(41) three 41c stamps Thanks for reading it you
That will depend on the value of the stamps and perhaps the dimensions of the envelope. If you have the right values, it would only be one, but it could be a dozen or so if you only have smaller values. Check your Post Office web site for the specific rate necessary.
The first ounce will cost 44 cents. Each additional ounce, or fraction, is another 17 ounces. That would be 78 cents for that envelope at the start of 2011.