Logistics

USPS Informed Delivery Business Benefits Guide

Read the complete guide below.

Launch Calculator

The Short Answer

USPS Informed Delivery is a free program that allows eligible residential customers to receive daily email previews of incoming mail before it arrives in their physical mailbox. For businesses, it is a direct mail enhancement tool that lets you add a digital "ride-along" — a color image and clickable URL — to the grayscale mailpiece preview that subscribers receive, turning a single direct mail send into an omnichannel touchpoint. The feature is free to use for business mailers, Informed Delivery notification emails achieve an average open rate of 60.6%, and campaigns are managed through the USPS Business Customer Gateway at no additional cost beyond the postage already paid for the mailing.

Understanding the Core Concept

Informed Delivery operates at the intersection of physical mail infrastructure and digital marketing. When USPS processes letter-sized mailpieces through its automated sorting equipment, it photographs the exterior address side of each piece and stores that image. Residential subscribers to the free Informed Delivery service receive a daily email digest — typically delivered between 7–9 AM local time — containing grayscale previews of all letter-sized mail scheduled to arrive that day.

Launch Calculator
Privacy First • Data stored locally

Real Example — Calculating the Incremental ROI of an Informed Delivery Campaign

Let's walk through a complete ROI calculation for a regional insurance company running a direct mail acquisition campaign.

Real World Scenario

Informed Delivery works best for specific campaign types and audience segments, and understanding its structural limitations prevents wasted setup effort on campaigns where it adds little incremental value.

Strategic Implications

Understanding these implications allows you to proactively manage your operational efficiency. Utilizing our specific tools provides the exact data points required to prevent margin erosion and optimize your strategic approach.

Actionable Steps

First, audit your current numbers using the calculator above. Second, identify the largest gaps between your actuals and the standard benchmarks. Third, implement a tracking system to monitor these metrics weekly. Finally, review your process every quarter to ensure you are continually optimizing.

Expert Insight

The biggest mistake companies make is relying on generalized industry data instead of their own precise calculations. When you map your exact costs and parameters into a standardized tool, you unlock compounding efficiencies that your competitors often miss.

Future Trends

Looking ahead, we expect margins to tighten as market pressures increase. The companies that build automated, real-time calculation workflows into their daily operations will be the ones that capture the most market share in the coming years.

Stop Guessing. Start Calculating.

Run the numbers instantly with our free tools.

Launch Calculator

Historical Context & Evolution

Historically, these calculations were done using rudimentary spreadsheets or expensive proprietary software, making it difficult for smaller operators to accurately predict costs. Modern, web-based tools have democratized this process, allowing immediate, precise calculations on demand.

Deep Dive Analysis

A rigorous analysis of this topic reveals that small percentage changes in these core metrics produce exponential changes in overall profitability. By standardizing your approach and continuously verifying against your specific constraints, you build a resilient operational model that can withstand market fluctuations.

3 Ways to Maximize Informed Delivery Campaign Performance

1

Design the Ride-Along Image as a CTA, Not a Logo

The ride-along image appears in an inbox alongside dozens of grayscale mail previews. A ride-along that is simply a color version of the mailpiece exterior wastes the attention advantage of the placement. Instead, design the ride-along image specifically as a digital CTA — include a clear action directive, the offer headline, and a visual that creates urgency or curiosity. Ride-along images with explicit CTAs ("Click to Claim Your $50 Offer Before Friday") consistently generate 2–4x higher click rates than brand image-only ride-alongs.

2

Time the Mail In-Home Date to Maximize the Pre-Arrival Window

The Informed Delivery notification arrives the morning of the expected delivery day. For campaigns where the physical piece contains a time-sensitive offer, consider the psychological effect of the recipient knowing the offer is coming before it arrives — they are primed and have already seen the message. Schedule mail in-home dates for Tuesday through Thursday, when both physical mail response rates and email engagement rates are highest. Avoid Friday and Saturday in-home dates, when the physical piece may sit in the mailbox over a weekend before being acted upon.

3

Use a Dedicated Landing Page With a Pre-Arrival Offer

Recipients who click the ride-along before the physical mail arrives are demonstrating unusually high intent — they found the digital preview compelling enough to act before the physical piece reinforced the message. Reward that behavior with a pre-arrival exclusive: a landing page that references the mail piece ("Your offer letter arrives today — claim it early here") with the same offer or a slightly enhanced version. This pre-arrival mechanic consistently outperforms generic landing pages because it acknowledges the recipient's specific context and uses the dual-channel delivery as a trust signal.

4

Automate Tracking Integrate your calculation process into your weekly operational review to spot trends early.

5

Validate Assumptions Check your base numbers against actual invoices and costs quarterly to ensure accuracy.

Glossary of Terms

Metric

A standard of measurement.

Benchmark

A standard or point of reference.

Optimization

The action of making the best use of a resource.

Efficiency

Achieving maximum productivity with minimum wasted effort.

Frequently Asked Questions

USPS Informed Delivery has grown to over 50 million enrolled subscribers in 2026, representing roughly 35–45% of deliverable residential addresses in most major metropolitan markets. Enrollment is heavier in urban and suburban markets and lighter in rural areas. For a national direct mail campaign targeting residential households, you can conservatively estimate that 35–40% of your mailing list will receive Informed Delivery notifications, meaning a 100,000-piece mailing will generate approximately 35,000–40,000 digital impressions through the notification channel in addition to the physical delivery.
Yes. There is no additional postage surcharge, campaign fee, or subscription cost for business mailers to add Informed Delivery ride-along content to their mailings. The only investment is the one-time setup of a USPS Business Customer Gateway account (free) and the 30–60 minutes of time required to prepare the ride-along image and submit the campaign through the Mailer Campaign Portal. The program is funded by USPS as a direct mail engagement enhancement initiative, making it one of the highest-ROI free marketing tools available for businesses with active direct mail programs.
Letter-sized mailpieces that travel through the USPS automated letter processing stream qualify for Informed Delivery imaging and campaigns. This includes standard letters, postcards (up to 4.25" x 6"), and self-mailers in letter dimensions. The maximum qualifying size is 11.5" x 6.125" x 0.25" thick. Flat mail (catalogs, magazines, oversized postcards), periodicals, and parcels do not receive the grayscale mailpiece preview but can use the Shipper Campaign Portal for package tracking-based ride-along content. Standard Marketing Mail, First-Class Mail, and Periodicals are all eligible for the letter mail Informed Delivery program.
By optimizing this metric, you directly improve your operational efficiency and bottom line margins.
Yes, these represent standard best practices, though exact figures will vary by your specific market conditions.

Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only.

Related Topics & Tools

What Is a Good NPS Score for SaaS in 2026?

A good NPS score for a SaaS company in 2026 is anything above 30, with top-quartile B2B SaaS businesses typically scoring between 40 and 60. Enterprise software averages around 35 to 40, while high-growth PLG (product-led growth) tools often reach 50 or higher. Any score below 0 signals serious retention risk, and scores between 0 and 20 indicate a product that is meeting baseline expectations but not generating word-of-mouth growth. NPS is calculated as the percentage of Promoters (score 9–10) minus the percentage of Detractors (score 0–6).

Read More

5 Free SaaS Valuation Tools for Founders in 2026

Valuing a SaaS business in 2026 requires modeling ARR multiples, growth rates, NRR, burn efficiency, and profitability — not just plugging a single revenue number into a calculator. The best free tools for founders cover the full range: from pure ARR-multiple calculators to unit economics modelers to EBITDA-based small business valuation tools. None of the tools listed here require a login, account, or payment. Depending on your business stage and whether you are raising equity, preparing for an acquisition, or benchmarking for internal purposes, different tools will serve different needs.

Read More

Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) Benchmarks by Industry 2026

Customer lifetime value (LTV) benchmarks in 2026 range from $100–$300 for ecommerce in year one, growing to $480 over three years, to $2,000–$5,000 for banking customers across 7–10 year relationships, and $50,000–$500,000+ for enterprise B2B SaaS accounts. The ideal LTV:CAC ratio across virtually all industries is 3:1 or higher — meaning every dollar spent acquiring a customer should return three or more dollars in lifetime gross profit. Calculate your LTV and LTV:CAC ratio at /finance/unit-economics.

Read More

Gross Margin vs Net Margin: What Is the Difference?

Gross margin measures the profit left after subtracting the direct cost of producing your product or service (COGS) from revenue. Net margin measures the profit left after subtracting every expense — COGS, operating expenses, interest, and taxes — from revenue. Gross margin tells you whether your business model works; net margin tells you whether your business survives. A 60% gross margin and a 5% net margin means the product generates healthy profit on each sale, but overhead is consuming most of it. Use the MetricRig Unit Economics Calculator at /finance/unit-economics to calculate both margins and identify where your profit is being eroded.

Read More

SaaS Burn Multiple by Growth Rate 2026

Burn multiple measures how many dollars a SaaS company burns for every dollar of net new ARR it adds — calculated as net cash burned divided by net new ARR over the same period. A burn multiple under 1.0x is considered elite, 1.0–1.5x is good, 1.5–2.0x is acceptable at early stages, and anything above 2.0x signals capital inefficiency that investors in 2026 will scrutinize heavily. The benchmark is contextual: a company growing 200% ARR year-over-year can sustain a 1.5–2.0x burn multiple far more defensibly than one growing 30%. Use the free Startup Runway Calculator at metricrig.com/finance/burn-rate to track your burn rate, net new ARR, and compute your burn multiple in real time.

Read More

OpEx vs CapEx: The Budget Decision Guide

Operating expenditures (OpEx) are costs expensed in the period they are incurred — payroll, rent, software subscriptions, and utilities. Capital expenditures (CapEx) are costs capitalized on the balance sheet and depreciated over their useful life — servers, manufacturing equipment, vehicles, and buildings. The key tax difference: OpEx reduces taxable income immediately in full, while CapEx reduces it gradually through depreciation schedules ranging from 3 to 39 years depending on asset class. For most businesses, the OpEx vs CapEx decision comes down to four factors: cash position, tax timing, balance sheet optics, and the strategic flexibility needed to adapt to changing technology or business conditions.

Read More