Snail mail, or regular postal mail delivered by the post office, has a reputation for being slow. While it’s true that email and other digital communication methods are generally faster, there are strategies you can use to help speed up response times when using snail mail.
Use Priority and Express Mail Options
The United States Postal Service (USPS) offers various service levels that provide faster delivery times for an additional fee. Using one of these options can dramatically decrease mail transit time.
Priority Mail delivers most packages in 1-3 business days based on distance. Priority Mail Express delivers overnight to most U.S. addresses and 2-3 days for destinations farther away. Using Priority Mail versus standard First Class mail for letters and small packages can shave off a few days of transit time. The good news is that the USPS rates for Certified Mail Label tracking haven’t increased for 2025.
Upgrading to Priority Mail Express for letters guarantees next day delivery to most of the United States. Going with Priority Mail Express instead of ground shipping for packages also speeds up transit by several days. The added fees for upgraded service levels means you pay more for faster response times.
Send Time Sensitive Mail Early
To maximize speed, you need to pay attention to mail pickup and delivery times. If you drop a letter in a collection box at 5pm on Friday, it will likely sit there through the weekend before USPS picks it up on Monday.
Instead, get your mail into the postal system earlier in the day and earlier in the week. Dropping off letters at the post office before the last scheduled pickup time on Tuesday means it’s more likely to get processed and reach its destination that same week.
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You can deposit packages in collection boxes as long as they have proper postage, but for valuable contents you may want to hand deliver directly to the post office. Getting packages into the mail stream earlier in the work week means fewer days in transit before the recipient gets it.
Ask Recipients for Faster Response
While you can take steps on the sending end to speed up mail, getting a quick response also depends on the recipient. Ask the recipient in your letter or package for a quicker response time if needed for time sensitive matters. Let them know you used Priority Mail to get the letter there quicker and hope they can prioritize responding soon after receiving it.
Also, notify recipients of important letters and packages in advance through phone, text, or email. Give them the expected delivery timeframe so they know to watch their mailbox. Request that time sensitive documents get scanned back right away.
Follow Up with Calls and Emails
Don’t rely solely on snail mail for important correspondence requiring a prompt reply. Mail something critical on Monday via Priority Mail, then call or email the recipient mid-week to confirm they received it and emphasize you need a response ASAP.
Phone calls and emails enable you to get an interim response and apply some pressure to act quickly on the mailed information. Use follow up communications wisely, however, or it could be seen as pestering versus polite persistence.
Consider Overnight Delivery
When you absolutely must have a response within 24 hours, private overnight delivery couriers may get there faster than Priority Mail Express. Services like FedEx offer next day delivery by 8:30 or 10:30am for an additional fee. The guaranteed arrival time makes it ideal for time sensitive documents like contracts requiring signatures.
Just keep in mind that private couriers deliver to many but not all destinations. Some rural addresses are not accessible by overnight delivery routes. Check service availability before paying extra for next day delivery that might not be possible.
Leverage Digital Communication
For the fastest possible response time, email and online document sharing eliminate the multi-day lag of snail mail. While digital communication isn’t right for every situation, using it where appropriate speeds the back and forth for both parties.
Scan and email signed documents instead of dropping them at the post office. Share important files via online cloud storage versus mailing flash drives and hard copies. Hold meetings over video conference rather than spending days coordinating schedules through the mail.
The key is choosing the right communication tools and mediums to match each situation. Snail mail still has benefits over digital options in many cases. But for time sensitive correspondence requiring the fastest response, go electronic instead of old-fashioned mail whenever appropriate.
Snail mail will never be as instantaneous as email and text messaging. But using faster delivery service levels, planning ahead, enlisting recipient cooperation, and supplementing with digital communications can significantly speed up response times. Being strategic about when, where and how you mail critical items makes the mail feel not quite so snail-like.