Royal Mail No-Delivery Alert Hits Every UK Postcode Today

Royal Mail No-Delivery Alert Hits Every UK Postcode Today

May 4, 2026

London, May 4, 2026, 19:03 BST

Royal Mail suspended all deliveries and collections nationwide on Monday, citing the Early May Bank Holiday. That left households and businesses waiting an extra day for post. According to its service notice, there were “no deliveries or collections of mail” on Monday, May 4. Royal Mail

The bank-holiday shutdown comes as Britain’s postal service faces intense scrutiny. Royal Mail has been working to fix service reliability, still reeling from missed delivery targets, pricier stamps, and a sweeping revamp of second-class mail.

Royal Mail’s public-holiday schedule covers England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland. The company notes that deliveries and collections happen most days—Saturdays included—but typically pause on public or local holidays.

Saturday, May 2: weekend services were set to operate as usual. On Sunday, May 3, parcel deliveries were expected. Royal Mail advised customers who missed a delivery to check the “Services Near You” tool for local Customer Service Point hours before heading out. Royal Mail

The calendar isn’t the only issue here. Royal Mail’s most recent update for local delivery offices reported zero locations flagged as affected. Still, the company warned that high sick absence, resourcing issues, or other local factors might prompt rotating deliveries. That could leave some addresses facing longer waits once a national pause ends.

This is about a bigger, structural change. Ofcom is dialing back the Universal Service Obligation—the rule that keeps postal prices the same everywhere in the UK—after reporting that letter volumes have plunged by more than half since 2011, putting the old business under financial pressure. Royal Mail now has the green light from the regulator to drop second-class letter delivery to alternate weekdays, but they’re still targeting delivery within three working days.

Royal Mail plans to shift second-class and other non-first-class letter deliveries to alternate weekdays, Monday through Friday. First-class letters stick with six-day service, and parcels stay at as many as seven days weekly. The company expects to test the approach at 240 delivery offices ahead of a broader rollout spanning roughly 1,200 offices, aiming to finish by December 2026.

Royal Mail boss Alistair Cochrane is promising a “step change” in performance, admitting, “We recognise our service hasn’t always been the standard our customers rightly expect and we’re determined to do better.” The company is putting up 500 million pounds over five years, with plans that include letting around 6,000 part-time postal staff boost their average weekly hours if required. The Guardian

Ofcom has overhauled its delivery benchmarks. The first-class next-day delivery goal drops to 90%, down from the previous 93%. For second-class mail, the regulator now sets the three-day target at 95%, previously 98.5%. There’s also a new safeguard: at least 99% of mail must not arrive more than two days late.

Royal Mail is hiking stamp prices again—first-class goes up to 1.80 pounds, second-class to 91 pence, effective April 7. Richard Travers, managing director of letters, pointed to a steep drop in volumes: “70% fewer letters sent than 20 years ago.” But there are still 32 million UK addresses that need deliveries. The Guardian

Monday’s key takeaway: Royal Mail isn’t making deliveries, and collections aren’t happening. The next scheduled pause across the UK falls on the Spring Bank Holiday, set for Monday, May 25.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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