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Postal Services - Market Share Analysis, Industry Trends & Statistics, Growth Forecasts (2026-2031)

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    Report

  • 120 Pages
  • May 2026
  • Region: Global
  • Mordor Intelligence
  • ID: 5759450
The global postal services market size is expected to increase from USD 329.93 billion in 2025 to USD 336.67 billion in 2026 and reach USD 359.94 billion by 2031, growing at a CAGR of 1.35% over 2026-2031. Escalating demand for temperature-controlled healthcare logistics, accelerated customs clearance through digital platforms, and corporate ESG mandates that reward low-carbon delivery networks are steering operators toward premium parcel services and electric vehicle fleets. This report is Segmented by Type (Standard Postal Services and Express Postal Services), by Item (Letters and Parcels), by Destination (Domestic and International), by End-User (B2B, B2C and C2C), by Delivery Mode (Road, Air, Sea, and Rail), and by Geography (North America, South America, Asia-Pacific, Europe, and Middle East and Africa). The Market Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).

Global Postal Services Market Trends and Insights

Corporate-Shipper ESG Scorecards Mandating Carbon-Neutral Postal Delivery

Corporate procurement teams now embed carbon-reduction clauses into logistics contracts, obligating postal operators to electrify fleets, procure renewable energy, and publish ISO 14083-aligned emissions data or risk exclusion from high-volume tenders. Deutsche Post DHL allocated EUR 7 billion (USD 8.23 billion) to decarbonization through 2030, already fielding 37,000 electric delivery vehicles and sourcing 30% sustainable aviation fuel by end-2024. Walmart, Amazon, and Unilever require year-on-year carbon cuts from logistics partners, pushing laggards out of Fortune 500 bids as 68% of 2024 RFPs ranked ESG alignment among the top three selection criteria. The dynamic rewards operators that quantify emissions across every shipment leg and penalize those without transparent reporting frameworks. As a result, premium parcel rates increasingly bundle carbon-accounting certificates that shippers can apply toward Scope 3 disclosures.

Global Rollout of Digital Customs Platforms Accelerating Low-Value Parcel Clearance

The EU’s ICS-2 system, mandatory for postal operators since March 2024, demands pre-arrival electronic data, reducing compliant low-value parcel clearance times by up to 42%. Concurrently, United States, ACE 2.0 automates duty assessment for shipments under USD 800, saving operators as much as USD 1.20 per parcel in processing costs. Cross-border e-commerce parcels jumped 23% in 2024, overwhelming gateways that lacked automated risk screening. Early adopters such as PostNL and Swiss Post cut dwell times 18-22% and freed warehouse space for higher-margin express goods. Compliance, however, is capital-intensive, with mid-sized postal administrations investing USD 15-25 million in IT platforms and data-quality controls. Operators unable to meet the data-integrity thresholds face penalties, shipment delays, and customer churn.

Escalating Cyber-Security Compliance Spend under EU NIS-2 and CISA Mandates

The EU’s NIS-2 Directive classifies postal services as “essential entities,” prescribing 24-hour breach reporting and fines up to EUR 10 million (USD 11.76 million) or 2% of global revenue for non-compliance. In the United States, CISA requires multi-factor authentication and network segmentation by March 2025. Royal Mail Group invested GBP 47 million (USD 59 million) after a 2023 ransomware attack, yet industry surveys show 31% of postal workers still fail phishing simulations. Mid-sized operators must divert 4-7% of IT budgets to compliance, hiring expensive cyber-talent or outsourcing to managed-security providers, tightening free cash flow, and delaying automation projects.

Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
  • Boom in Temperature-Controlled Healthcare Parcels Needing Track-and-Trace Postal Solutions
  • Rural Broadband Subsidies Enabling Bundled E-Government and Postal Digital Services
  • Volatile Jet-Fuel and Marine Bunker Surcharges Compress International Express Margins
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.

Segment Analysis

Asia-Pacific remains the growth engine, expanding 3.51% CAGR, and a commanding Global postal services market share at 36.45% in 2025. Vietnam’s postal revenue doubled between 2019 and 2023 to VND 59 trillion (USD 2.3 billion) as parcels soared to 2.5 billion items. India Post’s RFID-equipped Nodal Delivery Centres heighten traceability, while China Post’s USD 2.5 billion joint venture with Cainiao deploys 40 hubs across Belt-and-Road corridors. Japan Post’s USD 1.2 billion stake in Toll Group expands its Oceania footprint. Yet heterogenous GST thresholds and customs regimes multiply compliance workloads; operators must tailor IT systems market by market. Electrified two-wheeler fleets proliferate for dense urban routes, slashing cost per stop by 18%.

North America contributed roughly 28% of Global postal services market share in 2025. The USPS’s Delivering for America 2.0 pursues USD 36 billion in savings over 10 years, yet a USD 9.5 billion fiscal-2024 deficit spurs privatization debates. CISA compliance imposes USD 12-18 million in cyber outlays on mid-tier operators. Canada Post targets parcel-sorting automation and Shopify alliances to stem 8.2% annual letter declines. Rural broadband pilots in Alaska and Montana promise wholesale bandwidth rents that diversify revenue, illustrating how infrastructure policy intersects with postal modernization. Express healthcare parcels lift revenue density, but air-fuel surcharges pressure margins.

Europe represented nearly 26% market share. Denmark’s 2024 abolition of the letter USO signals liberalization momentum, while the EU’s NIS-2 and EPR rules tighten operational discipline. Deutsche Post’s AI sorters slash labor by 28%, enhancing competitiveness worth emulating across La Poste and Royal Mail networks. EPR fees add EUR 0.08-0.15 per kilogram of packaging, totaling an extra EUR 180-280 million (USD 211.73-329.36 million) annually. Micro-fulfillment conversions of 340 French post offices enable same-day delivery for e-commerce platforms, countering declining ad-mail. Cross-border parcel volumes benefit from streamlined ICS-2, yet fuel volatility and Brexit-related customs complexity continue to cloud express margins.

Complete Report Scope:

  • By Type
    • Standard Postal Services
    • Express Postal Services
  • By Item
    • Letters
    • Parcels
  • By Destination
    • Domestic
    • International
  • By End-User
    • Business-to-Business (B2B)
    • Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
    • Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C)
  • By Delivery Mode
    • Road
    • Air
    • Sea
    • Rail
  • By Geography
    • North America
      • United States
      • Canada
      • Mexico
    • South America
      • Brazil
      • Peru
      • Chile
      • Argentina
      • Rest of South America
    • Asia-Pacific
      • India
      • China
      • Japan
      • Australia
      • South Korea
      • South East Asia (Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Philippines)
      • Rest of Asia-Pacific
    • Europe
      • United Kingdom
      • Germany
      • France
      • Spain
      • Italy
      • BENELUX (Belgium, Netherlands, and Luxembourg)
      • NORDICS (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden)
      • Rest of Europe
    • Middle East and Africa
      • United Arab of Emirates
      • Saudi Arabia
      • South Africa
      • Nigeria
      • Rest of Middle East and Africa

Geography Analysis

B2C will grow 4.33% CAGR, lifting its share above 50% by 2028, as direct-to-consumer pharma, fashion resales, and meal subscriptions proliferate. The segment’s premium on speed prompts investment in same-day micro-fulfillment hubs and AI route planners. Capgemini forecasts quick-commerce turnover of USD 266 billion by 2029, reinforcing parcel urgency. B2B retained 52.06% market share in 2025. C2C shipments, propelled by recommerce platforms, add steady tailwinds at 3.2% CAGR, while B2B remains flat amid e-invoicing and digitized documentation. Operators counter B2B stagnation by layering supply-chain visibility dashboards and customs brokerage value-adds that capture service fees beyond postage.

Healthcare subscription programs enlarge the B2C share further. Pharmacies partner with posts to supply chronic-care medication kits, leveraging cold-chain nodes and providing recurring traffic that stabilizes daily volumes. Gig-economy rivals exert price pressure, but postal incumbents differentiate on nationwide coverage, secure chain of custody, and regulatory compliance.



Parcels owned 59.49% of 2025 market size and will grow 2.90% CAGR as e-commerce penetration nears 25% of global retail by 2031. Within parcels, healthcare and fresh groceries set the fastest trajectory, each above 8% CAGR, as home-based care and meal-kit adoption rise. Automated sortation investment reached USD 994.94 million in 2024 and is projected at USD 1.55 billion by 2031, driving throughput and traceability. Letters, now 40.51% of items handled, decline 1.8% annually due to digital invoices, with volumes increasingly skewed to recipients aged 50+. Blockchain e-registered mail could displace up to 20% of certified letters by 2030, accelerating contraction. The Global postal services market size for letters still exceeds USD 140 billion, but profitability hinges on cost restructuring and bundling with digital identity services.

Although the letters segment shrinks, legal and government requirements sustain a baseline. Operators monetize address databases for identity verification and leverage delivery confirmation networks for voter-ballot programs. In emerging markets, gap-filled rural broadband triggers incremental statement mail for micro-finance providers. Nonetheless, without dynamic pricing or cost-sharing models, letters’ contribution to the Global postal services market will diminish steadily.

Domestic shipments held 83.07% of 2025 market share, yet international parcels will outpace at 3.65% CAGR through 2031 as shoppers source products globally. The Global postal services market size tied to international deliveries is forecast at USD 64 billion by 2031, even with new tariffs such as the United States 34% levy on Chinese imports BBC. Digital customs advances like ICS-2 shorten clearance, enhancing reliability. However, fuel surcharges and geopolitical shocks introduce volatility; operators with diversified hubs and broker services absorb shocks better. Duty-paid options, expanded by DHL Express, simplify consumer experience and build loyalty among SMB exporters.

Domestic networks still drive scale economies, especially in populous countries. Rural broadband grants in India and Brazil raise domestic parcel density, improving route productivity. Yet urban congestion charges and low-emission zones strain cost structures, intensifying the shift toward consolidated locker deliveries and bicycle couriers.



Express services represented 24.85% of the 2025 market share yet are forecast to expand at a 3.91% CAGR, nearly triple standard services’ 1.12% pace, as shippers favor guaranteed delivery and IoT-enabled tracking. The Global postal services market size attributable to express services is projected to reach USD 89.4 billion by 2031, buoyed by biosimilar launches and direct-to-patient programs. Temperature-controlled consignments command surcharges, lifting per-parcel yield and offsetting higher aviation fuel costs. Operators retrofit aircraft with active containers and embed GPS sensors, generating granular data that satisfies pharma compliance audits. Standard services remain crucial for bulk mail and low-urgency parcels but suffer from automated letter substitution and relaxed universal service obligations. Automation upgrades, such as Deutsche Post’s AI sorters, trim labor expense, sustaining profitability even as volumes wane.

Standard services held 75.15% of the Global postal services market share in 2025, anchored by government correspondence and low-cost parcel delivery. However, shifts in regulatory frameworks Denmark ended its letter USO in 2024 signal mounting pressure to realign prices with cost. Growth pockets exist in hybrid mail, where printed statements are triggered from cloud-based platforms, offering financial institutions a compliant fallback as cyber breaches rise. Yet without diversified value-added logistics, standard-centric operators risk margin compression amid EPR and cybersecurity cost inflation.



Road retained 74.93% market share in 2025, yet air cargo expands 2.76% CAGR, benefiting from restocked belly-hold capacity as passenger traffic rebounds. Boeing delivered only 14 777F freighters in 2024, so constrained supply lifts charter yields. The Global postal services market share of air freight remains below 15%, but healthcare cold-chain and cross-continental e-commerce rely on its speed. Operators mitigate fuel exposure via hybrid networks flying priority SKUs while routing non-urgent parcels by sea or rail. China Railway Express ran 17,000 China-Europe trains in 2024, carrying 1.9 million TEU, an emerging option for mid-speed, low-carbon delivery. Electric vans deployed for road legs cut per-parcel CO₂ by 24%, aligning with shipper ESG scorecards.

Sea freight widens margin where delivery windows exceed 10 days. The IMO sulfur cap tacks USD 22 per TEU, but unit costs remain one-twentieth of air, appealing to mass-market apparel shippers. Rail’s resilience amid Red Sea disruptions drew postal operators to invest in Eurasian land bridges, diversifying risk. Combined modes underpin adaptive networks that weather fuel and geopolitical shocks.

List of Companies Covered in this Report:

  • Aramex
  • Australia Post
  • bpost Group
  • Brazil Correios
  • Canada Post
  • China Post Group
  • Correos (Spain)
  • DHL Group
  • Emirates Post Group
  • FedEx
  • International Distribution Services
  • Japan Post Holdings
  • La Poste Group
  • New Zealand Post
  • Poste Italiane
  • Posti Group (Finland)
  • PostNL
  • PostNord AB
  • SF Express (KEX-SF)
  • Singapore Post
  • Swiss Post
  • United Parcel Service of America, Inc.
  • United States Postal Service*

Additional Benefits:

  • The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
  • 3 months of analyst support

Table of Contents

1 Introduction
1.1 Study Assumptions and Market Definition
1.2 Scope of the Study
2 Research Methodology3 Executive Summary
4 Market Landscape
4.1 Market Overview
4.2 Market Drivers
4.2.1 Corporate-Shipper ESG Scorecards Mandating Carbon-Neutral Postal Delivery
4.2.2 Global Rollout of Digital Customs Platforms (E.G., EU ICS-2, US ACE 2.0) Accelerating Low-Value Parcel Clearance
4.2.3 Boom in Temperature-Controlled Healthcare Parcels (Vaccines, Biologics, Diagnostics) Needing Track-and-Trace Postal Solutions
4.2.4 Rural Broadband Subsidies Enabling Bundled E-Government and Postal Digital Services, Lifting Transaction Mail Volumes
4.2.5 Blockchain-Based E-Registered Mail Gaining Legal Acceptance for Cross-Border Contracts and Compliance Documentation
4.2.6 Same-Day Urban Micro-Fulfilment Hubs Repurposing Post-Office Real Estate and Boosting Premium Parcel Yield
4.3 Market Restraints
4.3.1 Escalating Cyber-Security Compliance Spend under EU NIS-2, US CISA Mandates and Rising Ransomware Incidents
4.3.2 Volatile Jet-Fuel and Marine Bunker Surcharges Compressing Profit in International Express Lanes
4.3.3 Extended-Producer-Responsibility (EPR) Packaging Laws Raising Operational Costs for Parcel Handling and Returns
4.3.4 Ad-Mail Budget Migration to Cookieless Digital Channels Reducing High-Margin Marketing Mail Revenue
4.4 Value / Supply-Chain Analysis
4.5 Regulatory Outlook
4.6 Technological Outlook
4.7 Porter's Five Forces Analysis
4.7.1 Threat of New Entrants
4.7.2 Bargaining Power of Buyers
4.7.3 Bargaining Power of Suppliers
4.7.4 Threat of Substitutes
4.7.5 Intensity of Competitive Rivalry
4.8 Impact of Geo-Political Events on the Market
5 Market Size and Growth Forecasts (Value)
5.1 By Type
5.1.1 Standard Postal Services
5.1.2 Express Postal Services
5.2 By Item
5.2.1 Letters
5.2.2 Parcels
5.3 By Destination
5.3.1 Domestic
5.3.2 International
5.4 By End-User
5.4.1 Business-to-Business (B2B)
5.4.2 Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
5.4.3 Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C)
5.5 By Delivery Mode
5.5.1 Road
5.5.2 Air
5.5.3 Sea
5.5.4 Rail
5.6 By Geography
5.6.1 North America
5.6.1.1 United States
5.6.1.2 Canada
5.6.1.3 Mexico
5.6.2 South America
5.6.2.1 Brazil
5.6.2.2 Peru
5.6.2.3 Chile
5.6.2.4 Argentina
5.6.2.5 Rest of South America
5.6.3 Asia-Pacific
5.6.3.1 India
5.6.3.2 China
5.6.3.3 Japan
5.6.3.4 Australia
5.6.3.5 South Korea
5.6.3.6 South East Asia (Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Philippines)
5.6.3.7 Rest of Asia-Pacific
5.6.4 Europe
5.6.4.1 United Kingdom
5.6.4.2 Germany
5.6.4.3 France
5.6.4.4 Spain
5.6.4.5 Italy
5.6.4.6 BENELUX (Belgium, Netherlands, and Luxembourg)
5.6.4.7 NORDICS (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden)
5.6.4.8 Rest of Europe
5.6.5 Middle East and Africa
5.6.5.1 United Arab of Emirates
5.6.5.2 Saudi Arabia
5.6.5.3 South Africa
5.6.5.4 Nigeria
5.6.5.5 Rest of Middle East and Africa
6 Competitive Landscape
6.1 Market Concentration
6.2 Strategic Moves
6.3 Market Share Analysis
6.4 Company Profiles (Includes Global-Level Overview, Market-Level Overview, Core Segments, Financials, Strategic Information, Market Rank/Share, Products and Services, Recent Developments)
6.4.1 Aramex
6.4.2 Australia Post
6.4.3 bpost Group
6.4.4 Brazil Correios
6.4.5 Canada Post
6.4.6 China Post Group
6.4.7 Correos (Spain)
6.4.8 DHL Group
6.4.9 Emirates Post Group
6.4.10 FedEx
6.4.11 International Distribution Services
6.4.12 Japan Post Holdings
6.4.13 La Poste Group
6.4.14 New Zealand Post
6.4.15 Poste Italiane
6.4.16 Posti Group (Finland)
6.4.17 PostNL
6.4.18 PostNord AB
6.4.19 SF Express (KEX-SF)
6.4.20 Singapore Post
6.4.21 Swiss Post
6.4.22 United Parcel Service of America, Inc.
6.4.23 United States Postal Service*
7 Market Opportunities and Future Outlook
7.1 White-Space and Unmet-Need Assessment

Companies Mentioned (Partial List)

A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:

  • Aramex
  • Australia Post
  • bpost Group
  • Brazil Correios
  • Canada Post
  • China Post Group
  • Correos (Spain)
  • DHL Group
  • Emirates Post Group
  • FedEx
  • International Distribution Services
  • Japan Post Holdings
  • La Poste Group
  • New Zealand Post
  • Poste Italiane
  • Posti Group (Finland)
  • PostNL
  • PostNord AB
  • SF Express (KEX-SF)
  • Singapore Post
  • Swiss Post
  • United Parcel Service of America, Inc.
  • United States Postal Service*