Federal News
USPS Seeks Congressional Financial Relief
March 17, 2026
The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) is confronting a critical financial shortfall projected to exhaust its cash reserves by fall 2026 without congressional intervention. Postmaster General David Steiner has communicated to lawmakers the urgent need to raise the agency's borrowing limit and consider legislative reforms to prevent service reductions such as cutting delivery days or closing post offices. Congressional leaders remain divided on providing additional funding or authorizing increased debt, while USPS explores options including nearly doubling stamp prices to sustain operations. This situation presents significant implications for procurement planning, contract management, and service continuity within USPS and its suppliers.
- Why this matters: USPS's financial instability threatens operational continuity, potentially impacting existing contracts and future procurement cycles.
- Procurement professionals should anticipate possible changes in USPS service requirements, delivery schedules, and contract scopes due to potential service reductions.
- Vendors and contractors may face increased scrutiny on cost efficiency and contract performance as USPS seeks to optimize expenditures amid funding constraints.
- Organizations involved in postal services should evaluate the impact of legislative outcomes on USPS's financial health and adjust business strategies accordingly.
Congress needs to have confidence not only that [USPS will] be able to pay it back, but that they're on the right road to achieve financial security. For Congress to consider this request, the Postal Service must also prove that they have exhausted their [other] options already.
— Rep. Pete Sessions
If you want the same number of delivery days and post offices, we can do that, but someone has to pay for it. If you want to have a discussion about reducing services, we can do that. But there's one thing we can't do, and that is the status quo, and we don't have a lot of time.
— Postmaster General David Steiner
Itβs highly unlikely that USPS will be able to fix its financial condition on its own. Congress will need to act.
— David Marroni, GAO Director of Physical Infrastructure
Agencies
United States Postal Service, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, Postal Regulatory Commission, Government Accountability Office, U.S. Treasury Department
Locations
Sources
- USPS cutting delivery days βon the table,β as agency runs out of cash, postmaster general tells lawmakers | Federal News Network · Federal News Network · Mar 17
- Nearly $1 stamps? Lawmakers contemplate how to avert USPS financial crisis - Government Executive · Government Executive · Mar 17