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The U.S. Postal Service Could Run Out of Cash by 2027 — Here's What That Actually Means for You

The U.S. Postal Service Could Run Out of Cash by 2027 — Here's What That Actually Means for You

The U.S. Postal Service Could Run Out of Cash by 2027, Here's What That Actually Means for You

That Little Blue Mailbox Might Be On Life Support

You probably don't think much about the mail carrier who drops off your packages. They show up, rain or shine, six days a week, to every single address in the country. It's so reliable it's almost invisible.

But here's something that might stop you mid-scroll: the entire system that makes that happen could essentially run out of money. Soon.

Not in some vague, "eventually it'll be a problem" kind of way. We're talking about early 2027. That's less than a year away.

Postmaster General David Steiner warned lawmakers this week that, at the current run rate, the U.S. Postal Service is on track to run out of cash for paying its workers and vendors in about a year, and may have to stop deliveries altogether.

Let that sink in for a second.


What's Actually Going On Here?

Okay, let's back up and talk about what USPS even is, because this part matters.

The Postal Service is a unique federal government agency. It doesn't run on tax dollars. It relies entirely on stamps and service fees to deliver mail and packages six days a week to every address in the country.

That model worked beautifully for decades. Then the internet happened.

Since 2007, the mailing agency has been operating with a financial shortfall almost every fiscal year, with fewer people and businesses using first-class mail, its most profitable product, amid the rise of paperless billing and digital communication.

Think about your own habits. When's the last time you mailed a bill? Or got a statement in the mail that you actually needed?

Exactly.


The Numbers Are Ugly

Here's where it gets really hard to ignore:

  • USPS ended fiscal year 2025 with a net loss of $9 billion.
  • After the busy holiday season in December, the agency posted its fourth consecutive quarterly loss of $1.3 billion, driven partly by workers' compensation, retiree health benefit costs, and operating expenses.
  • Congress hasn't updated USPS's borrowing limit since 1990, it's currently capped at $15 billion.

So USPS has been quietly borrowing from the U.S. Treasury and deferring some pension obligations just to keep the lights on. And that rope is almost out.

As Steiner put it plainly to the Associated Press: "How long are employees going to work and vendors going to show up if we're not paying them?"

That's not a rhetorical question. That's a real crisis timeline.


What the Postmaster Is Asking Congress to Do

Steiner testified before a House Oversight subcommittee this week and came with a clear list of things Congress needs to do, and fast.

1. Lift the Borrowing Cap

Steiner says the most efficient and immediate fix is for Congress to lift the $15 billion borrowing cap, which has been frozen since 1990. He told the AP that doing so would "buy us the time to make the fixes we need to make."

It's basically asking for a bigger credit card limit while the long-term reforms are sorted out. Not a perfect solution, but a necessary one to avoid total collapse.

2. Allow Higher Stamp Prices

Steiner says USPS needs the authority to raise postage prices. While stamp prices are already up 46% from $0.50 in early 2019, he argues they're still far lower than what other countries charge.

Yes, you might be paying more to send that birthday card to grandma. But the alternative is... no mail service at all.

3. Reform Retiree Benefit Obligations

This one's a bit technical, but it's huge. For years, USPS was burdened with pre-funding future retiree health benefits, essentially being required to set aside money decades in advance. Congress addressed part of this with the Postal Service Reform Act of 2022, which canceled about $57 billion in past-due prefunding payments. That year was the only fiscal year in the past two decades that USPS ended without a shortfall.

So reform works. The problem is it hasn't gone far enough.

4. Potentially Cut to Five-Day Delivery

This is the one that'll ruffle feathers. Steiner acknowledged that USPS could save about $3 billion a year by switching to five-day delivery, and another $840 million by closing small post offices in remote areas. He noted these ideas "may not be palatable to Congress or the American public."

Yeah… that's putting it mildly. Rural communities especially depend on USPS not just for Amazon boxes, but for prescription medications, Social Security letters, legal documents, and more.


Why This Keeps Happening

Here's the thing that's genuinely frustrating about this story: this isn't new. USPS has been financially squeezed for nearly two decades.

Steiner himself used a vivid metaphor that cuts right to the heart of it: "In the time since peak 2006 mail volume, the Postal Service was thrown overboard and instead of tossing us a life jacket, we were thrown an anchor."

That "anchor" refers to outdated regulations, rules written for a different era that haven't kept pace with how Americans actually communicate and shop today.

Add to that the political complications. President Trump has been pushing to appoint his own nominees to USPS's board of governors, and earlier discussions about potentially moving USPS under the Department of Commerce have quieted, but not disappeared entirely.

So you've got a financially struggling agency, tangled in political crossfire, trying to modernize within rules that haven't meaningfully changed since the early 1990s.


What This Could Mean for You

Let's get practical for a second, because this isn't just a policy debate. It's something that directly touches daily life for millions of Americans.

If USPS reduces services or stops delivering:

  • Rural residents could lose their primary access to packages, prescriptions, and essential documents
  • Small businesses that rely on USPS for affordable shipping could face significant cost increases
  • Absentee ballots, tax returns, and legal filings sent by mail could be impacted
  • Veterans and seniors who rely on USPS to receive benefits information could be left in limbo

Steiner framed the core question for the American public this way: "If you want us to deliver everywhere, every day, we'll do it. That's not a problem. But who is going to pay for it?"

That's actually a fair question. And it's one Congress is now being forced to answer, on a ticking clock.


What Happens Next

Subcommittee on Government Operations Chairman Pete Sessions has said members will assess whether USPS is reliable enough to justify allowing it to borrow more money from the Treasury.

Translation: Congress isn't just going to hand over a blank check. They want to see evidence of reform and a credible plan.

USPS is also trying to generate more revenue by opening its nationwide "last-mile" delivery network to bids from large and small businesses. But some industry experts warn this could actually push major shippers like Amazon to stop relying on USPS, potentially making the financial situation worse, not better.

It's a tough spot. Every potential solution comes with trade-offs.

USPS board chair Amber McReynolds put it bluntly at a February board meeting: policymakers must act with urgency to address the structural and statutory cost pressures weighing on the agency's financial future.



The U.S. Postal Service isn't just a place to buy stamps. It's the connective tissue of the country, especially for the people and places that digital infrastructure has left behind.

And right now, that tissue is fraying.

Steiner walked into this job last summer, and by his own admission, didn't fully grasp how dire things were. He told the AP: "Interestingly, I'm not sure some of the people at the Postal Service realized how dramatic it was."

If the people running it didn't know how bad things were… there's a good chance most Americans don't either.

That's why this moment matters. Not because postal reform is glamorous. But because what happens in those Congressional hearings over the next few months could determine whether your mail carrier keeps showing up in 2027, and whether the millions of Americans who depend on the mail get left without a lifeline.


FAQ SECTION

Q: Is the U.S. Postal Service going bankrupt in 2027? 

A: Not technically "bankrupt," but USPS Postmaster General David Steiner warned in March 2026 that the agency could run out of operating cash within 12 months, by early 2027, without Congressional action to lift its borrowing limit and reform outdated regulations.

Q: Does USPS receive taxpayer funding? 

A: No. USPS is self-funded through postage and service fees. It does not receive annual appropriations from Congress, though it can borrow from the U.S. Treasury.

Q: What is Congress being asked to do for USPS? 

A: Postmaster Steiner is asking Congress to lift the $15 billion borrowing cap (unchanged since 1990), allow higher postage prices, and reform retiree benefit obligations that continue to drain the agency's finances.

Q: What happens if USPS runs out of money? 

A: If USPS can't pay employees and vendors, mail and package delivery could stop entirely, impacting millions of Americans, especially in rural areas, who rely on USPS for medications, legal documents, and essential deliveries.

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