
08-05-2021 07:41 PM - edited 08-05-2021 07:42 PM
I have some items to ship that are < .8" thick which is the lettermail maximum (<80grams). I usually enclose them in cardboard so they lay flat and even in the envelope (4"x6"). Sometime i get hassled by the clerk to use parcel service and/or fill out a customs declaration at 3-7x the cost. Normally I would use chitchats via USPS but sometimes CP is more convenient. What is your experience with CP?
08-16-2021 07:39 PM
What type of envelope did you have and what else did you have in the envelope? I would think that most single coins would go through the slot for regular mail. If I was selling single coins, I would have stamps at home and just put the item in the outside mail box...not bring it inside.
08-16-2021 10:00 PM
Is the slot exactly 2cm or a little smaller? I'm going to make one myself as I have a milling machine.
08-16-2021 10:05 PM
If it is < .200" thick and < 30g should only cost $1.30 to USA
I've send many that size w/o issue.
08-16-2021 10:58 PM
08-17-2021 08:42 PM - edited 08-17-2021 08:50 PM
The template has a slot of 300mm x 20mm, which is big enough to fit an oversize letter with a maximum of 270mm for the smaller side. I have it in my hands, and double-checked it with a measuring tape to be sure!
EDIT: I understand now that it's not the official Canada Post template, so that's why it's not doing exactly what it should help to do...
08-17-2021 08:48 PM
The problem here is you didn't buy the official Canada Post template. Check my earlier message with the link.
08-17-2021 11:08 PM - edited 08-17-2021 11:10 PM
I'm a noob with letterpost and looking to use it to expend my sales to US since i'm selling trading cards and apparentely US people are the biggest cards buyers. But if i understand in reality since CP says we can't ship ''goods'' we just can't legally sell and ship with letterpost this is weird. Sucks that we have to go against the laws, but the laws sometimes does not makes sense. There's no way we'll pay/charge 9$ to ship as small packet items that we can ship for 1.50$ in an envelope, dunno what they expect
And for that reason I tend to run with the rule "if it looks like a letter, it is probably a letter"
Does a bubble mailer is automaticly suspected as a non letter package? Even if it's flat and looks like paper in it?
Is there a chance you could be investigated by a postal inspector and potentially fined for your actions which may or may not be considered customs fraud? I mean I guess
What's the worst case scenario if you get caught shipping a ''good'' with letterpost, or including plastic? I mean no one gonna go in jail for shipping a pokemon card in a toploader to USA, i guess lmao
I'm trying to figuring out shipping to US but i'm a bit confused there's no way we can use small packet on low expensive items and sell. It makes me hesitant too cause when i put a toploader in a sheet in an envelop, if it's touched it clearly feels like something is rigid in it. Not sure how to includes US shipping on some of my items
08-19-2021 05:03 AM
Canada Post doesn't provide an official definition of what they mean by "goods", but Google gives a definition of "merchandise or posessions" which is a fairly standard definition. Guess what: literally EVERYTHING that you sell (i.e. it has a commercial value) would be considered "goods" and therefore TECHNICALLY can NOT be shipped via International Letter-post and must go as a parcel with a customs declaration
While messing around, i saw that we actually can set up CP letterpost as shipping option on ebay. This is actually very weird that if legally we're not supposed to use letterpost to ship things we sell, that a selling platform like ebay gives us the option to offer CP letterpost as shipping. Seems contradictory
12-15-2021 12:59 AM
Sent out 20+ letterrmail "packages" to USA - all received no issues!
12-15-2021 01:06 AM
Good to know but this is a ZOMBIE THREAD from last August.