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US Postal Service launches service to prepay import duties
US Postal Service launches service to prepay import duties
Packages roll along a conveyor belt at a U.S. Postal Service distribution center in Opa Locka, Florida, on Dec. 17, 2024. · Supply Chain Dive · Joe Raedle via Getty Images
Max Garland
February 11, 2026 2 min read
_This story was originally published on Supply Chain Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Supply Chain Dive newsletter. _
Dive Brief:
Dive Insight:
The Postal Service introduced Delivered Duty Paid as an option to address tariffs that apply to certain international shipments and the end of the U.S. de minimis exemption, according to a November filing with the Postal Regulatory Commission.
By paying the amount owed at the time of mailing, a shipper reduces the risk of the recipient rejecting the product due to unexpected import charges owed upon delivery, the Postal Service filing said. In turn, the shipper will avoid scenarios where they either have to abandon the rejected item or pay for its return.
The agency intends to charge a $0 fee for the service at first, as levying another cost on top of import duties and a third-party service fee could make Delivered Duty Paid too expensive, “potentially resulting in a reduction in volume,” per the November filing. The Postal Service did not specify the cost of the third-party service fee.
“However, as customs requirements are likely to evolve, the Postal Service requires flexibility to increase the fee to, among other things, cover any costs that are required to implement new payment solutions,” the agency said in the filing.
Despite the $0 fee from the Postal Service for Delivered Duty Paid, the agency said in the filing it doesn’t expect that to create an advantage over competing services, as potential customers will likely weigh the total cost of shipping rather than a specific charge. UPS launched its Global Checkout service last year, which factors in applicable international duties, fees and taxes for online purchases prior to checkout.
Editor’s note: This story was first published in our Logistics Weekly newsletter. Sign up here.
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