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Commercial First-Class Mail Rates (Updated 2026)

How commercial First-Class Mail rates work, including volume requirements, presort discounts, and practical alternatives for small businesses.

Postmarkr Team·Postmarkr
·Updated February 28, 2026

Commercial First-Class Mail Rates (Updated 2026)#

Commercial First‑Class Mail (also called First‑Class Mail Presort) is where postage gets dramatically cheaper—if you can meet USPS requirements around volume, preparation, and documentation.

This guide covers:

  • what “commercial rates” actually mean,
  • the minimum volume and permit reality,
  • and the major pricing levers that affect cost per piece.

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What “commercial First-Class Mail” means#

Commercial First‑Class Mail pricing applies when you mail in bulk and follow USPS presort and preparation rules.

It’s not a “coupon.” It’s a different pricing structure.

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Minimum volume requirements (the first gate)#

For First‑Class Mail commercial discounts, USPS guidance for bulk mail highlights minimum volume requirements such as:

  • 500 pieces for First‑Class Mail

Source: USPS Postal Explorer “What is Commercial Mail?” (https://pe.usps.com/businessmail101?ViewName=WhatIsBulkMail)

If you’re mailing fewer pieces, you’re generally in Retail pricing (stamps/metered) territory.

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Permits and annual fees (the part most SEO articles skip)#

To mail at commercial rates, you typically need:

  • a USPS mailing permit / permit imprint setup, and
  • an annual mailing fee.

USPS pricing documentation lists:

  • Annual Mailing Fee (First‑Class Mail Presort, per office of mailing): $370.00
  • Permit Imprint application fee: $370.00

Source: USPS Notice 123 (Domestic—Business Mailing Fees). (https://pe.usps.com/resources/PriceChange/January%202026%20Price%20Change%20-%20Notice123%20PDF%20Draft.pdf)

(Fees can change over time; always confirm with USPS for your office of mailing.)

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What drives the commercial rate you qualify for#

Commercial First‑Class pricing depends on preparation and sortation depth, such as:

  • 5‑Digit
  • AADC
  • Mixed AADC
  • (and other presort structures)

In general: the more work you do up front (sorting, containerization, barcoding, eDoc), the lower the per‑piece price.

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Intelligent Mail (IMb) and documentation matter#

Commercial mail typically requires:

  • barcoding (IMb),
  • electronic documentation (eDoc),
  • and meeting USPS mailpiece quality standards.

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Small but real discounts: Full-Service and Seamless#

USPS pricing documentation includes small per‑piece incentives when you meet specific program requirements. For example, USPS Notice 123 lists:

  • a per‑piece subtraction for Full‑Service Intelligent Mail, and
  • a per‑piece subtraction for Seamless Acceptance

(for qualifying automation letters/postcards). Source: USPS Notice 123 (Full‑Service / Seamless discount notes). (https://pe.usps.com/resources/PriceChange/January%202026%20Price%20Change%20-%20Notice123%20PDF%20Draft.pdf)

These aren’t huge individually, but at scale they add up.

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Who commercial First-Class Mail is best for#

Commercial pricing is usually worth it when:

  • you mail regularly (not once a year),
  • your volume per campaign clears the minimums,
  • and you can operationalize prep (or work with a provider who can).

Typical users:

  • billing and statements
  • compliance notices
  • membership mail
  • healthcare and insurance mail
  • large customer communication programs

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FAQ#

What’s the minimum quantity for commercial First-Class Mail?#

USPS bulk mail guidance commonly references 500 pieces for First‑Class Mail commercial discounts. Source: USPS Postal Explorer “What is Commercial Mail?” (https://pe.usps.com/businessmail101?ViewName=WhatIsBulkMail)

How much is the annual mailing fee?#

USPS Notice 123 lists an Annual Mailing Fee of $370 (First‑Class Mail Presort, per office of mailing) and a Permit Imprint application fee of $370. Source: USPS Notice 123. (https://pe.usps.com/resources/PriceChange/January%202026%20Price%20Change%20-%20Notice123%20PDF%20Draft.pdf)

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  • Retail rates (stamps/metered/flats): /blog/first-class-mail-rates
  • First‑Class Mail for Business: /blog/first-class-mail-business-guide
  • First‑Class vs Marketing Mail: /blog/first-class-vs-marketing-mail

Related Topics

Overview Guides

Pricing and Cost

Comparisons