A recent consumer research report has revealed that postal delivery delays during the 2025 Christmas period worsened significantly, with an estimated 16 million UK adults — around 29 per cent — experiencing late delivery of letters and cards over the festive season. This represents a roughly 50 per cent increase compared with the previous year, underscoring persistent challenges in national mail services.
The annual research, conducted by a statutory postal service watchdog based on a survey of over 2,000 adults, found that delays affected personal and essential communications, not just seasonal greetings. An estimated 5.7 million people missed vital correspondence, including letters about health appointments, fines, benefit decisions and legal notices, due to late arrivals or extended gaps between deliveries.
The report noted that cost pressures may be compounding user frustration: more than a third of respondents said they sent fewer Christmas cards in 2025 because postage costs had risen sharply — with the price of first-class stamps more than doubling in recent years — even as delivery performance targets have frequently been missed.
Consumer advocates have raised concerns that recent policy changes to the universal postal service obligation, which will reduce second-class deliveries to alternate weekdays instead of six days a week, could further degrade reliability if enforcement of performance standards does not tighten. The watchdog has called on the national communications regulator to take stronger action against missed delivery targets and ensure that future price increases are tied to real service improvements.
The findings point to broader pressures facing postal networks, including high volumes during peak seasons, workforce constraints and evolving service expectations from the public and businesses alike. Industry observers say restoring consistent delivery performance will be critical to maintaining consumer confidence in letter mail services over the long term.
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