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More than two-thirds of people think the increase in the price of a first-class stamp over the past five years is unfair, a survey has found.
From Monday, a first-class stamp will cost £1.70 – more than double the 76p it cost in 2020.
The cost has risen eight times over that period despite Royal Mail failing to meet any annual delivery targets in the past five years.
One in three people (33%) say they would struggle to afford a book of eight first-class stamps, now costing £13.60, the poll for Citizens Advice found.
Some 16% said they would find it difficult to afford a single first-class stamp after the latest 5p rise.
With second-class stamps rising by 2p to 87p from Monday, almost a quarter of people (22%) said they would struggle to buy a book of eight, now costing almost £7, with 9% saying they would find it hard to afford a single second-class stamp.
However, the charity found that a third of those polled (32%) had used a premium product, as opposed to a basic first or second-class stamp, to make sure an important letter or card arrived on time.
Regulator Ofcom is consulting on the Universal Service Obligation (USO) held by Royal Mail, which could see 2nd class letter deliveries reduced from six days a week to alternate weekdays.
Almost a third of people (29%) said they would like Royal Mail to keep delivering 2nd class letters six days a week while 37% said they could accept the reduction to alternate weekdays but only if the company met its delivery targets.
Ofcom is also considering relaxing Royal Mail’s annual delivery targets, which would mean 90% of first-class mail would have to be delivered next-day, instead of the current 93% target.
Under the plans, 95% of second-class mail would need to be delivered within three days, instead of the current 98.5%.
Some 86% said they have received an important letter or document in the post in the last six months and half (50%) have sent one.
Previous research by Citizens Advice suggests that an estimated 10.7 million people suffered delays to their post over Christmas, with 3.4 million of those missing vital letters for health appointments, bills, legal documents and fines.