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Cash-strapped US Postal Service suspends contributions to pension plan

By Thomson Reuters Apr 9, 2026 | 8:09 AM

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON, April 9 (Reuters) – The U.S. Postal Service said Thursday it will temporarily suspend employer payments for a federal pension program to conserve cash amid ​a severe financial crisis.

USPS told the White House Office ‌of Personnel Management that effective Friday it will stop making $200 million payments every other week for its employer contributions for the defined benefit portion of the Federal Employees Retirement System. USPS warned Thursday that without ‌reforms ​it could run out of cash as ⁠soon as February.

USPS estimated ⁠it will save $2.5 billion with the action through September 30 and said there would not be any immediate detrimental impact on current or future retirees if the payments are ​temporarily withheld.

The service has reported net losses of $118 billion since 2007 as first-class mail, its most profitable product, has fallen ⁠to its lowest volume since the ⁠late 1960s. USPS in February reported a quarterly ​loss of $1.25 billion.

“The risk to the Postal Service and the ​American public from insufficient liquidity for postal operations dramatically ‌outweighs any longer-term risk to the pension funds from not making the currently due payments,” USPS said.

Earlier this week, USPS won approval from the Postal Regulatory Commission for a temporary 8% ⁠price hike for priority mail and package deliveries, effective April 26, to deal with rising transportation and fuel costs. USPS plans for the ⁠surcharge to be ‌in effect through January 17.

U.S. Postmaster General ⁠David Steiner told Congress last month that hiking ​first-class ‌mail stamp prices to 95 cents or $1 ​or more, up ⁠from the current 78 cents, would provide added revenue and help it cut losses.

Stamp prices are up 46% since early 2019, when they were 50 cents, but Steiner said they are still far lower than in other countries.

(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing ​by Chizu Nomiyama)