April 7, 2026

WASHINGTON, April 6 (Reuters) – Amazon.com (AMZN.O), opens new tab on Monday announced it reached a new agreement with the U.S. Postal Service on package deliveries, and sources ​said the cash-strapped mail system would retain about 80% of its ‌existing deliveries from its biggest customer.
That 20% cut is a dramatically better outcome for the postal agency than the two-thirds or larger reduction that Reuters reported last month Amazon had threatened.
Amazon has cut a fresh deal with the U.S. Postal Service in a huge relief for the cash-strapped mail giant, keeping about 80% of its package volume after reportedly threatening a far deeper slash. The agreement is a much softer blow than the brutal two-thirds-or-more reduction Amazon had been said to be weighing, and it gives USPS breathing room as it fights fears it could run out of cash as soon as October. Amazon says the new arrangement keeps its long-running partnership alive, while still allowing the company to keep expanding its own delivery network — just not at a pace that would challenge USPS’s nationwide reach.

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