Go Back  FlyerTalk Forums > Travel&Dining > TravelBuzz
Reload this Page >

Post Card Mailing time to the US

Community
Wiki Posts
Search

Post Card Mailing time to the US

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Aug 11, 2006 | 2:29 pm
  #1  
Original Poster
FlyerTalk Evangelist
10 Countries Visited
20 Countries Visited
30 Countries Visited
25 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Mar 2000
Location: West Seattle, WA
Posts: 10,469
Post Card Mailing time to the US

Are any countries notorious for having slow mail delivery to the US? Like most folks, I enjoy sending postcards home when I'm abroad on my travels. BUt my past two trips to Prague and Peru have yielded a 0% success rate for a postcard arriving at its American Destination.

Is it just the Luck O' the chexfan, or do others share my woes?
chexfan is offline  
Old Aug 11, 2006 | 3:42 pm
  #2  
10 Countries Visited
20 Countries Visited
30 Countries Visited
20 Years on Site
 
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Sacramento, CA, US
Posts: 2,264
Post cards

Well, one rule is to never mail cards from a hotel. Always mail from an official mailbox.

I found Peru to be very reliable, in part due to the privatized post office.

European post cards tend to take about a week.

Bhutan was very unreliable. None of the cards I mailed from the airport mailbox arrived, even though the ones I mailed from the interior (2 hours by road from the airport) did arrive.

Last edited by Reindeerflame; Aug 11, 2006 at 4:01 pm
Reindeerflame is offline  
Old Aug 11, 2006 | 3:51 pm
  #3  
 
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Lugano, CH (MXP) sometimes SEA
Programs: AA PLT, AS, UA
Posts: 259
The postcards I usually mail from Europe tend to take 10 days to 2 weeks to be delivered. My problem is that I'm usually home by the time they arrive. That bugs me more than them not arriving.
miki is offline  
Old Aug 11, 2006 | 4:08 pm
  #4  
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: lawn guylandt
Programs: AA million miler
Posts: 478
Originally Posted by chexfan
Prague and Peru have yielded a 0% success rate for a postcard arriving at its American Destination.......or do others share my woes?
think about it- you're in another country and hand a desk clerk the equivalent of (let's say) one US dollar per card, five cards is five bucks

he takes your money and says he will stamp and mail them

HA!

the money goes in his pocket, the cards go in the trash

as stated above, i always mail from a post office- or put stamped cards directly into the mail box, i never give someone cash in hopes the cards will get mailed

there's another scam- in a certain Asian country, a postcard to the US, airmail, is the equivalent of 33 us cents. i've been asked, in luxury hotels, for 3 times that!- know your costs!!
edgewood is offline  
Old Aug 11, 2006 | 4:12 pm
  #5  
FlyerTalk Evangelist
10 Countries Visited
20 Countries Visited
 
Join Date: Nov 1999
Programs: FB PLT again afater a decade as plebian
Posts: 22,940
Originally Posted by Reindeerflame
Well, one rule is to never mail cards from a hotel. Always mail from an official mailbox.
I wouldn't count on that. I once put a postcard into an official mailbox outside a post office in FTE (Argentina). Something was amiss and I checked the mailbox to find a poor design and a loose lock, and stacks of postcards inside (and international rates in Argentina are very very high).

That said, I mailed from the J.W. Marriott in BKK a few years ago (staff actually took new stamps and put on on the card) and they actually reached the receipients. Did the same thing (but not see the cards beign stamped) at the Conrad a year later and of course nothing ever reached the destinations.

Last edited by YVR Cockroach; Aug 11, 2006 at 4:19 pm
YVR Cockroach is offline  
Old Aug 11, 2006 | 4:32 pm
  #6  
Original Poster
FlyerTalk Evangelist
10 Countries Visited
20 Countries Visited
30 Countries Visited
25 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Mar 2000
Location: West Seattle, WA
Posts: 10,469
The post cards from Prague were stamped and left w/ the Concierge. A postcard from a post office in Lima and a mailbox in Cuzco still haven't made it.

Every single postcard I've sent across my travels had appeared until now. Oh well.
chexfan is offline  
Old Aug 11, 2006 | 4:39 pm
  #7  
1M
50 Countries Visited
100 Nights
20 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: DC|NYC
Programs: UA GS, DL Plat, Marriott Bonvoy LIfetime Titanium/SPG refugee, Hertz Prez, Amtrak Select
Posts: 3,213
2+ weeks from South Africa.

And, NO, don't hand your postcards to the front desk staff with some cash. Either charge the postage to your room, or, my preference, by the stamps and then mail postcards later (from airport (my preference), front desk, or corner box).

At NRT, they had a special airport cancellation, which was received as being very cool by my two nephews.
EnvoyBoy is offline  
Old Aug 11, 2006 | 7:56 pm
  #8  
10 Countries Visited20 Countries Visited30 Countries Visited20 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Berlin, Germany; Not in Indiana any more!
Programs: UA Gold, HH Gold, Dirt elsewhere
Posts: 164
Originally Posted by miki
The postcards I usually mail from Europe tend to take 10 days to 2 weeks to be delivered. My problem is that I'm usually home by the time they arrive. That bugs me more than them not arriving.
May I humbly suggest taking longer trips and mailing the postcards earlier? Month long vacations should take care of the problem.

All of my postcards have eventually made it to the destination. I do recall that a bunch of postcards I mailed from the Prague Castle took a very long time to get to the States--on the order of two months, but this was three or four years ago. A similar mailing in March this year took only a week or so.

What I find most interesting are the price differentials in mailing postcards. Germany is incredibly expensive not just to the States, but internally. It stands out sharply compared to the Netherlands or Czech Republic, in my mind. The US has the least expensive internal rates and are not that bad to Europe ($0.74). US to Canada rates though (I was told $0.55 recently) seem a bit steep considering the physcial distance involved.
InIndiana is offline  
Old Aug 12, 2006 | 3:39 pm
  #9  
50 Countries Visited
5M
All eyes on you!
25 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Michigan
Programs: Delta Diamond, AA Exec Plat, UA 1K, Marriott Titanium, Hilton Diamond
Posts: 625
Istanbul: one time it took 3 weeks; another, only a week.
tc fly girl is offline  
Old Aug 12, 2006 | 10:18 pm
  #10  
10 Countries Visited
20 Countries Visited
30 Countries Visited
20 Years on Site
 
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Sacramento, CA, US
Posts: 2,264
Switzerland More Than Germany

Originally Posted by InIndiana
May I humbly suggest taking longer trips and mailing the postcards earlier? Month long vacations should take care of the problem.

All of my postcards have eventually made it to the destination. I do recall that a bunch of postcards I mailed from the Prague Castle took a very long time to get to the States--on the order of two months, but this was three or four years ago. A similar mailing in March this year took only a week or so.

What I find most interesting are the price differentials in mailing postcards. Germany is incredibly expensive not just to the States, but internally. It stands out sharply compared to the Netherlands or Czech Republic, in my mind. The US has the least expensive internal rates and are not that bad to Europe ($0.74). US to Canada rates though (I was told $0.55 recently) seem a bit steep considering the physcial distance involved.

Switzerland, at CHF 1,80 (about US $1.44) beats Germany's E 1, (about US $1.28). The U.S. certainly is a good value.

Another annoying feature is that many countries are now selling tourist-oriented "anywhere" stamps for postcards, which do not exhibit a value. That takes some of the fun out of it. South Africa, UK, and Switzerland are examples of this phenomenon.

And, one year in Italy, I received 3 different quotes for the postcard rate to North America from 3 post offices...but all the cards arrived anyway!
Reindeerflame is offline  
Old Aug 12, 2006 | 11:05 pm
  #11  
FlyerTalk Evangelist
10 Countries Visited
20 Countries Visited
 
Join Date: Nov 1999
Programs: FB PLT again afater a decade as plebian
Posts: 22,940
Originally Posted by Reindeerflame
Switzerland, at CHF 1,80 (about US $1.44) beats Germany's E 1, (about US $1.28). The U.S. certainly is a good value.
Argentina must be up there. ARS 5.25 (USD 1.75).

Cyprus and Thailand are quite cheap IIRC.
YVR Cockroach is offline  
Old Aug 13, 2006 | 3:30 am
  #12  
10 Countries Visited20 Countries Visited30 Countries Visited20 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Terra Australis Cognita
Posts: 5,353
In dodgy countries, it's best to go to directly to the post office and ask for the stamps to be cancelled then and there.
jpatokal is offline  
Old Aug 13, 2006 | 10:39 am
  #13  
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: So Cal
Programs: AA EXP - 1.4MM
Posts: 684
I'd like to know what hotels you guys are staying at that don't follow through on the simple task of mailing postcards - so I can avoid them. I've never had a problem - and I don't stay at the Four Seasons or Grosvenor! I can't believe any 3 star or better hotel would pay so poorly that someone would need to pocket stamp money to supplement their income.

I'd also like to borrow your psychic powers - since you're sure it was the hotel and not the country's postal system that caused the failure - please let me know what this Wednesday's Lotto numbers in CA will be. :-)
West Coast Ace is offline  
Old Sep 12, 2006 | 11:47 am
  #14  
Original Poster
FlyerTalk Evangelist
10 Countries Visited
20 Countries Visited
30 Countries Visited
25 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Mar 2000
Location: West Seattle, WA
Posts: 10,469
My Peru Postcard arrived on saturday about 6 weeks after I mailed it!
chexfan is offline  
Old Sep 12, 2006 | 11:59 am
  #15  
2M
50 Countries Visited
All eyes on you!
20 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: DEN, FL350
Programs: IHTFP, AS 100k, ex-AA EXP, ex-UA 1K, Ex-BD/A6/AC *G (RIP)
Posts: 518
Based on my recent trips, here's how long my postcards took to make it back home (BOS):

From...
Tokyo, Japan - 6 business days
Tallinn, Estonia - 7 business days
Riga, Latvia - 5 business days
Vilnius, Lithuania - 9 business days
Nida, Lithuania - 12 business days

My only international postcard that has never made it home was mailed at Heathrow :-/
Roaming Ryan is offline  


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

This site is owned, operated, and maintained by MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Designated trademarks are the property of their respective owners.