All UK postcodes have been warned about the delay
Royal Mail has issued a message to all UK households today. The delivery firm aims to deliver letters and parcels to homes and businesses across the nation six days a week.
But, as of Monday, May 4, Royal Mail has said there are “no deliveries or collections” today. Due to the Early May Bank Holiday, there will be no postal service.
Royal Mail said: “There will be no deliveries or collections of mail on Monday, 4 May.” Over the weekend, its service ran as usual on Saturday, May 2 and Sunday Parcel deliveries took place yesterday.
It added: “We deliver and collect your mail on most days of the year, including Saturdays. However, we don’t usually deliver or collect on public or local holidays.”
The delay to mail is in place across England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland today. Normal service will resume from Tuesday, May 5.
Royal Mail has faced criticism over late deliveries and its owner faced questions from MPs. Daniel Kretinsky previously told MPs: “Of course I am deeply sorry for any letters that arrive late.”
Speaking to the Commons Business select committee, Mr Kretinsky added: “It is not perfect, but it is not catastrophic.”
Last month, Royal Mail vowed to meet its letter delivery targets by May 2027 as part of a £500 million turnaround. Part-time staff will be offered the option to work longer hours to improve service.
The changes will mean it will axe Saturday Second Class deliveries and move to alternate weekdays – three days one week, and two days the next.
Royal Mail said the changes and planned investment will see it improve First Class Next Day delivery to around 85% within nine months of the reforms being brought in, before reaching the 90% target set by regulator Ofcom within a year.
The firm also vowed to deliver 93% of Second Class letters within three days over the course of nine months, and to hit the 95% target by May next year.
Royal Mail was fined £21 million by Ofcom in October for missing targets after it delivered 77% of First Class post and 92.5% of Second Class post on time in 2024-25.
From April 1, Ofcom lowered the delivery targets for First Class post to be delivered the next day from 93% to 90% and Second Class to be delivered within three days from 98.5% to 95%.
Alistair Cochrane, chief executive of Royal Mail, said: “We recognise our service hasn’t always been the standard our customers rightly expect and we’re determined to do better.
“The plan we’ve set out today shows how we’ll make a step change in performance across the UK, backed by £500 million of investment over the next five years.”









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