LogisticsIndustry ContextFriday, June 26, 20264 min read

How USPS shippers can navigate changes to pricing, parcel measurements

Supply Chain Dive11h agogeneral
How USPS shippers can navigate changes to pricing, parcel measurements
Executive Summary

Customers have ways to mitigate cost pressures that may stem from dimensional reporting tweaks and sub-pound rate changes starting July 12.

Source Lens

Industry Context

Useful background context, but lower-priority than direct platform, community, or operator intelligence.

Impact Level

medium

Use this briefing to decide whether your team needs an immediate workflow, policy, or reporting change.

Key Stat / Trigger

No single quantitative trigger surfaced in this report.

Focus on the operational implication, not just the headline.

Relevant For
Brand SellersAgencies

Full Coverage

An article from How USPS shippers can navigate changes to pricing, parcel measurements Customers have ways to mitigate cost pressures that may stem from dimensional reporting tweaks and sub-pound rate changes starting July 12. Published June 26, 2026 Max Garland Lead Reporter Share Copy link Email / Print License Add us on Google U. S.

Postal Service mail carrier Alberto Jo delivers mail to homes on Aug. 5, 2010 in Miami. The agency is aligning some of its pricing practices with approaches taken by FedEx and UPS. Joe Raedle via Getty Images Listen to the article 5 min This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback. A wave of U. S.

Postal Service pricing changes is set to take effect next month, introducing fresh cost pressures for parcel shippers. On July 12, the agency will change how it calculates the size and rates for large-but-lightweight packages, expand its dimensional reporting requirements, and eliminate ounce-based rates for certain USPS Ground Advantage shipments.

Some of the changes could catch unprepared shippers off guard and increase their transportation costs, experts told Supply Chain Dive. The changes align the Postal Service’s pricing practices more closely with those of FedEx and UPS. The adjustments could also draw in additional revenue for the financially ailing agency.

However, the moves come with some risk attached, as customers could explore other delivery options, said Mark Waverek, managing partner at PlaidMark Management Consulting Services. "The biggest challenge probably for the Post Office is maintaining or retaining existing customers through these changes," Waverek said.

USPS tweaks dimensional measurements Packages exceeding one cubic foot are subject to USPS rates based on dimensional weight, which is calculated by multiplying length, width and height, then dividing that total by a specific number called the divisor.

USPS will lower its divisor from 166 to 139 — matching FedEx and UPS’ typical approach — and round up all fractional measurements to the next inch starting July 12. These pricing adjustments will fuel higher rates for shipments measured by dimensional weight, Waverek told Supply Chain Dive.

For example, a Priority Mail package that weighs three pounds could have a dimensional weight of 17 pounds under the new rules, resulting in higher charges, according to a Pitney Bowes presentation earlier this month. A Pitney Bowes presentation slide outlines the pricing impact U. S. Postal Service dimensional weight adjustments will have on packages.

Retrieved from Pitney Bowes on June 25, 2026 Shippers with a limited amount of SKUs and packaging sizes should be able to adjust to the USPS changes quickly, but businesses frequently customizing their box sizes will need to weigh the pricing impacts at a deeper level, Waverek said.

Lightweight but bulky packages are especially vulnerable to the Postal Service’s changes, because the parcels’ dimensional weights will likely be much higher than their actual weights, logistics data platform Loop said on LinkedIn.

To mitigate cost challenges, shippers should find opportunities to shrink their package sizes, said Jack McCrum, director of optimization and analytics at Reveel, which offers a parcel shipping intelligence platform. "If you have a lot of empty space in your packages, you're going to be more susceptible to these fractional changes," McCrum said.

“It's going to be more painful for you.” Shippers will also need to ensure they report their package dimensions to USPS accurately when using services like Ground Advantage or Priority Mail, or face a $3 noncompliance fee.

The requirement currently applies only to parcels exceeding 1 cubic foot or 22 inches in length, but it will expand to all shipments within the affected services regardless of size starting July 12. However, the noncompliance charge on newly eligible shipments won’t start being assessed until early next year.

"If you have a lot of empty space in your packages, you're going to be more susceptible to these fractional changes. It's going to be more painful for you.”

Jack McCrum Director of optimization and analytics at Reveel McCrum advised shippers to “have very accurate measurements ahead of this implementation change” in their warehouse and transportation management systems, as a $3 charge can snowball into a bigger cost challenge for high-volume shippers.

For example, when UPS began rounding up fractions of an inch last year, many noncompliant packages were hit with additional fees. This led to some shippers facing shipping charge corrections up to three times what they would normally pay, McCrum said.

Price increases for sub-pound shipments On the same day the Postal Service is adjusting its dimensional pricing, the agency will also eliminate ounce-based rate differences for sub-pound USPS Ground Advantage Commercial shipments. Some shipments’ prices will jump as much as $2. 04 with the change. USPS Ground Adva

Original Source

This briefing is based on reporting from Supply Chain Dive. Use the original post for full primary-source context.

View original
LinkedIn Post Generator

Style

Audience