The price of a first class stamp in the US increased to 44 cents on May 11, 2009, from 42 cents previously.
A first class US postage stamp typically costs $0.44. If the postage rate changes, usually by a cent or two, you can buy stamps that cost $0.01 or $0.02 to make up the diffference.
the postage stamp was invented in 1837 by a schoolmaster.
They went up in May 2009. The postal service said they wouldn't increase postage again through 2010.
That is practically impossible to answer. There are nearly 200 countries in the world, with a wide variety of postage stamps for all kinds of categories of postage. Postage has changed through that time, with new kinds of postage and all sorts of changes in stamps. Some countries did not exist in 1960 that did in 2000, and others ceased to exist during that period. To list all the prices of all of the stamps in all of those countries and their changes, would be vast. Outside of postage stamps, then there are all kinds of other stamps, like rubber stamps and metal stamps, stamps on products etc. They all have costs too that have changed. So your question has a vast list of answers, that would be impossible to give you.
tuesday
44 cents
It varies from year to year for the cost of postage stamps. Right now in 2010, it cost around 44 cents for stamps..
You can use forever stamps for an ounce of postage forever. They never lose their value for one ounce of postage.
1.39 but if you only have .44 stamps, you will need 4 and will be overpaying by .37 usps.com has a postage rate calculator on their site
It is expected that there will be an increase. Most of the First Class stamps currently available are Forever stamps. They will be valid after the postage rate goes up.
Flag stamps were 42 cents face value, they were supposed to be forever stamps, postage never to increase from that 42 cents, but that flew out the window real fast.
Yes, their value will increase when the cost of postage goes up. And you will pay the current cost for stamps at the post office.
One. A standard .44¢ postage stamp.
Forever stamps are still good for the new rates. Stamps with a 42-cent denomination require another 2 cents of added postage to meet the current rate of 44 cents.
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.
Yokiti Yamamoto has written: 'Japanese postage stamps' -- subject(s): Postage stamps 'Japanese postage stamps (for philatelists)' -- subject(s): Postage-stamps
First Class Postage is 44 cents for the first ounce.