Last updated: June 29, 2026
When should you buy holiday stamps for Christmas cards? The practical answer is: before your cards are completely written and addressed. Ordering stamps early gives you time to confirm quantities, test one finished envelope, correct address-list problems, and handle late additions without turning holiday mail into a last-minute project.
This guide provides a simple planning timeline for family Christmas cards, seasonal greetings, customer thank-you notes, and year-end letters. It does not replace the current mailing dates published by USPS. Always check the latest USPS guidance before choosing your final send date.
Why holiday stamps should be part of the early plan
Cards and envelopes usually receive most of the attention, but postage can become the final bottleneck. A mailing may be delayed because the finished envelope weighs more than expected, a square card needs different postage, or the original stamp quantity did not include address mistakes and last-minute recipients.
Buying stamps earlier also gives you more time to choose a design that fits the message. Seasonal designs can complement Christmas cards and winter greetings, while classic U.S. Flag stamps can work across holiday cards, family letters, and professional correspondence.
Eight to ten weeks before your target send date
Start with the mailing list and the purpose of the mailing. Separate family cards, personal notes, customer greetings, international recipients, and any envelopes that may contain extra inserts.
- Remove duplicate or outdated addresses.
- Count households rather than individual names when one card serves a family.
- Identify international, military, or time-sensitive recipients.
- Choose whether one stamp design will serve the entire list.
- Add a reasonable buffer for mistakes and late additions.
At this stage, browse the ToolStamps Christmas Stamps collection for seasonal options. If you want postage that remains useful after the holidays, compare it with the broader Forever Stamps collection.
Six to eight weeks before your target send date
Order the cards, envelopes, and stamps. The goal is not to mail immediately; it is to have the main supplies together before addressing and assembly begin.
Order enough stamps for the confirmed list plus a buffer. Extra stamps can cover a damaged envelope, an incorrect address, a returned card, or someone added after the first batch is complete. Forever Stamps do not expire and retain the value of the current First-Class Mail one-ounce letter rate, so unused stamps can generally remain useful for future eligible mail.
Four to six weeks before your target send date
Assemble one complete sample card before preparing the whole batch. Include every insert, photo, decorative element, and closure that will appear in the finished mailing.
Check the sample if the envelope is:
- heavier than a typical one-ounce letter;
- square, rigid, unusually thick, or oversized;
- made with heavy card stock;
- filled with multiple photos or inserts; or
- closed with a wax seal, ribbon, or bulky decoration.
USPS states that a Forever Stamp covers the current First-Class Mail one-ounce letter rate for an eligible standard letter. Weight, dimensions, thickness, rigidity, and shape can change the required postage. Use the USPS postage calculator or ask at a Post Office before stamping every envelope.
Two to four weeks before your target send date
Finish addressing, return addresses, messages, and envelope checks. Group cards by destination or mailing priority if that makes the project easier to manage.
Do not rely on a previous year's holiday deadline. USPS publishes seasonal recommendations, and those dates can vary by year, destination, and mail service. International and military mail may need substantially more lead time than domestic cards.
If your mailing includes invitations, thank-you notes, or other card types, use the broader guide to stamps for cards, invitations, and thank-you notes.
The week you mail your cards
Complete a final quality check before placing the cards in the mail:
- Confirm each recipient and delivery address.
- Confirm the return address is readable.
- Make sure each envelope is fully sealed.
- Verify that every envelope has the required postage.
- Keep a short record of cards mailed to customers or business contacts.
For a large customer list, divide the work into manageable batches. The ToolStamps guide to business mailing stamps provides additional ideas for professional correspondence and year-end customer mail.
How many extra holiday stamps should you buy?
There is no universal buffer that fits every list. A small personal mailing may need only a few extras, while a business mailing may benefit from a larger cushion. Base the number on the likelihood of address corrections, replacement envelopes, late recipients, and additional year-end notes.
Avoid ordering from an unverified count. Finalize the main list first, then add the buffer. This keeps the purchase deliberate without leaving the mailing one mistake away from running out of postage.
Seasonal stamps or classic Forever Stamps?
Seasonal stamps are a natural choice when the envelope is part of the holiday presentation. Classic designs are more flexible when the same supply will also be used for invoices, everyday letters, customer documents, or post-holiday thank-you notes.
For more design guidance, read Holiday Stamps for Christmas Cards and Seasonal Mail. The planning article you are reading focuses on timing and workflow; the related guide focuses on choosing a design and matching it to the type of mail.
FAQ
When is the best time to order holiday stamps?
Order them after the main mailing list is counted but before the cards are fully addressed. For many households and small businesses, ordering six to eight weeks before the intended send date provides useful planning time without depending on a last-minute purchase.
Can Forever Stamps be used for Christmas cards?
Yes, when the finished card qualifies for the applicable First-Class Mail one-ounce letter rate. Heavy, square, rigid, thick, or oversized envelopes may require additional postage.
Do holiday Forever Stamps expire?
Forever Stamps do not expire and retain the value of the current First-Class Mail one-ounce letter rate. The finished envelope must still meet the relevant weight, size, shape, and service requirements.
Should businesses order holiday stamps earlier?
Usually, yes. Customer lists may require address cleanup, approval, message review, and batch preparation. Starting earlier also gives the business time to test one finished envelope before assembling the full mailing.
Where should I check the current holiday mailing dates?
Use the current holiday and mailing guidance on USPS.com. Do not assume that dates from an earlier year apply to the current season.
Final checklist
- Count the mailing list and add a realistic buffer.
- Choose seasonal or classic stamp designs.
- Order cards, envelopes, and stamps before assembly begins.
- Build and weigh one complete sample envelope.
- Check current USPS mailing guidance.
- Verify every address, seal, and postage amount before mailing.
ToolStamps is an independent online stamp retailer and is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Postal Service. Review the ToolStamps trust and authenticity information before ordering.