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USPS Question

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7 comments

  • Mobuck

     'I expect that this letter will not be signed by the addressee.' You mean the recipient won't accept/sign for the letter?

     Refused is one of the options. Technically, the addressee must actually state they will not accept delivery.

    IIRC, there are 3 choices of reason for non-delivery on the 'Return to Sender' stamp. We used a stamp with lines for attempted delivery and after 3rd attempt, the mailpiece is returned.

    It's been 25 years since I was in that line of work.

    0
  • Ditch-Runner

    Hire a private dective to serve it ?

    Just a wild guess

    0
  • notnow

    You can opt for " restricted delivery " which means only the addresee can sign for it. And I'm thinking you're sending a certified letter rather than registered one. Certified uses the green number label. Registered uses red. Mobuck covered the unclaimed there's also refused and I don't know what his 3rd reason is unless it's undeliverable as addressed. Registered is how someone would mail a valuable firearm. Certified is how the buyer would notify the seller that the firearm was bent into a pretzel .

    6
  • tomh.

    I don't think the post office reattempts mail. After the first try, you have some amount of time to go to the post office and pick it up yourself.

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  • Mobuck

    ^^^ Unless the process has changed, USPS makes 3 attempts to deliver 'signature' mail. I retired in 2009 so things may have changed since then.

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  • cbxjeff

    So a registered letter that is refused isn't returned to sender?

    0
  • notnow

    Oh yeah, it's returned and then you have to sign for it to get it back. That's a cya thing for the usps for legal matters. Btw I'm typing on a small tablet. If I hit a disagree, I didn't mean to.

    6

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