« Back to blog home page

Undeliverable As Addressed

Do you know how much mail is “Undeliverable As Addressed” (UAA). The United States Postal Service estimates that as much as 34 percent of mail pieces in the mail stream — one out of every three — falls into this enormously costly category. According to a recent USPS study, 1.6 billion pieces of mail were returned, 1.985 billion pieces of mail were forwarded, and over 6 billion pieces of mail were discarded. That’s almost 10 billion pieces of mail that may never reach its intended recipient.

This costs the Postal Service $1.8 billion annually to process this mail, and it costs the senders $5-7 billion to produce and mail those catalogs and letters that are never produced.

Why is some mail undeliverable as addressed? There are a number of reasons. One has to do with the number of people who move each year. Over 40 million Americans change their address annually, which creates formidable obstacles in maintaining a high-quality mailing list. And, the folks that move don’t always submit a Change of Address form to the post office. In fact, only 30% of Americans do that. Another reason has to do with incorrect or incomplete addresses, such as typos, missing apartment numbers, or incorrect zip codes. Although many mailers use address correction software, it only catches a portion of these UAA’s.

So, do the Postal Service, the mailers, and the environment a favor – if you move, fill out a Change of Address form and have your mail forwarded to your new address. If your local government changes your address for some reason (usually for updated zip codes), make sure that the people you receive mail from know that. And, if you happen to receive mail for someone who lived in your house or apartment before you, please recycle it appropriately, or mark it “Moved” and return it to the sender so that they know to remove that name/address from their mailing lists.

This entry was posted on Friday, January 18th, 2008 at 3:46 pm and is filed under Environment. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

2 Responses to “Undeliverable As Addressed”

  1. A couple of words of caution on forwarding notices. My daughter moved out almost a year ago & we are still getting bank statements, etc. The flow has slowed, but you would think it would have stopped by now. On a more detrimental note, my son moved out 3 years ago, but didn’t fill out a form. I was told to mark it “Moved” as you say. This did work, unfortunately too well. His first name is the same as my husbands. His middle name is different, which I have indicated on his returned mail - but guess what? Now random pieces of our mail get returned. Like the phone bill, cable bill, etc. If I’m lucky, I find out a month later when I get a late notice. Eventually I had to change these bills to my name just to make sure they get delivered. So be careful with marking mail “moved” and relying on the USPS.

    Dawn on January 21st, 2008 at 7:28 pm
  2. The irony, of course, is that filling out a COA gets your new address on dozens of mailing lists… catch-22.

    Last time I looked, I don’t think there was a way to opt out of that. I could be wrong.

    Jay Levitt on January 25th, 2008 at 7:54 am
 

(required)

(required) Will not be published