Pro Login

Canada Post Lost $1.57 Billion Last Year. It's Burning Through Federal Loans To Stay Open

Published Apr 21, 2026
Share:
Summary:
  • Canada Post reported a record $1.57 billion pre-tax loss for 2025.
  • The Crown corporation is surviving on $2 billion in federal loans.
  • Plans to end doorstep delivery for 4 million addresses and switch them to community mailboxes.

Canada Post just reported the worst year in its history. It's also telling Ottawa that won't be enough.

The Crown corporation posted a $1.57 billion pre-tax loss for 2025. That's its biggest ever. It's surviving on $2 billion of federal loans, roughly split between a $1.03 billion package approved last year and another $1.01 billion approved in early 2026. Both are supposed to be repaid. Nobody inside the company believes that's realistic on the current trajectory.

Where The Losses Came From

Parcel volumes dropped by 79 million pieces last year. That alone translated to $850 million in lost revenue. Canada Post blamed strike action and private carrier competition.

Amazon and other retailers shifted more Canadian last-mile delivery to private carriers during the 2024-2025 labour uncertainty. Once those contracts moved, they haven't come back. Customers rarely do.

Think of the postal service as a grocery store that lost its biggest buyer. The lights stay on. The bills don't.

The Fix Is A Mailbox

Canada Post is planning to end doorstep delivery for the 4 million addresses that still have it. Those customers will get assigned to community mailbox clusters over the next five years. The company says that move alone saves $400 million a year.

That's a quarter of the 2025 loss, recovered by cutting the thing that most Canadians associate with mail service. The political fight will be loud. Rural residents, elderly Canadians, and accessibility advocates have already pushed back. The math isn't really in question. The politics is.

The Mailbox Fight Already Brewing

The community mailbox rollout is set to run over five years, which gives opponents plenty of time to turn it into an election issue. Rural MPs are already raising the accessibility angle, arguing that elderly Canadians and people with mobility issues can't walk to a cluster box in a Manitoba winter.

Accessibility groups have filed formal objections with Canada Post's regulator, which pushes the timeline longer and adds legal costs on top of the delivery savings.

The underlying business math doesn't change while the politics plays out. Parcel volume that moved to private carriers during the 2024-2025 strike uncertainty is not coming back, which means the $850 million in lost revenue is baked in whether the mailbox plan clears the fight or not.

Think of Canada Post's problem as a store that lost its anchor tenant. You can cut staff. You can change the sign. You can renegotiate the lease. The foot traffic that left does not walk back in because you did any of it.

Worth Noting

Canada's post office is not alone. The US Postal Service has lost money for 17 of the last 18 years. Royal Mail is privatising. Deutsche Post has leaned into logistics and away from letters.

Government-run mail services built for letters are trying to survive in a world where the parcel business has already been taken by private couriers. Canada Post's story is what happens when that transition stalls.

The loans bought Canada Post a year. The mailbox plan has to buy it the next decade.

Disclosure

Get Market Briefs delivered to your inbox every morning for free!

No fluff. No noise. No politics. Just finance news you can read in 5 minutes.

Blogs

April 15, 2026
What Is a Put Option? A Simple Guide for Investors
  • A put option is a contract that gives you the right to sell a stock at a set price before a set date.
  • Investors use put options to protect their portfolio against losses or to profit when they think a stock will drop.
  • The most you can lose when buying a put option is the premium you paid for the contract.
Read More
April 13, 2026
What Is Free Cash Flow? How To Find It & Why It's Important
  • Free cash flow is the cash a company has left after paying its bills and putting money back into the business.
  • Investors use free cash flow to figure out what a company is really worth - and if the stock is a good deal.
  • You can find free cash flow on a company's cash flow report, one of three key reports every public company files.
Read More
April 13, 2026
Non Taxable Income: What It Is and Why Investors Care

Non taxable income is money you earn that the IRS does not tax - like Roth IRA cash, muni bond interest, and certain investment gains. The U.S. tax code taxes workers, investors, and business owners at very different rates. Tools like Roth accounts, muni bonds, and real estate write-offs can help you keep more of what you earn.

Read More
April 11, 2026
Nasdaq Index Fund: A Beginner's Guide to Investing in the Nasdaq 100
  • A Nasdaq index fund lets you invest in the 100 biggest non-bank companies on the stock market all at once.
  • You can access the Nasdaq through index funds, mutual funds, or ETFs like QQQ - each with its own fees, trading rules, and style.
  • Picking the right Nasdaq index fund comes down to three things: who runs it, what is in it, and what it costs.
Read More
April 11, 2026
What Is Wealth? It's Not What Most People Think
  • Wealth is about owning assets that grow and pay you - not just earning a high salary.
  • In a capitalist system, there are two ways to get paid: from your labor and from your capital.
  • Building wealth takes a shift in mindset, a money system, and the habit of investing before you spend.
Read More
April 10, 2026
Micron Stock: The AI Memory Play Most Investors Are Missing
  • Micron (MU) is the only U.S. company that makes HBM chips - the short-term memory layer that AI systems need to run.
  • By early 2026, data centers were using about 70% of all memory chips made in the world, creating an 18-month backlog for new orders.
  • Micron's DRAM - or short-term memory chip - revenue jumped 69% year over year, and the company shifted away from consumer products to focus almost entirely on AI.
Read More
April 10, 2026
What Is Working Capital? What Investors Need To Know
  • Working capital is current assets minus current liabilities - it shows if a business can pay its short-term bills.
  • You find it on a company's balance sheet inside its 10-K report.
  • Changes in working capital show up on the cash flow statement and affect how much cash a business really makes.
Read More
April 9, 2026
What Is a Meme Stock? A Simple Guide for New Investors

You've probably heard the term "meme stock" thrown around on […]

Read More
April 9, 2026
Enterprise Value Formula: What It Is and How to Calculate It
  • Enterprise value (EV) shows what a company is really worth - debt and cash included - not just its stock price
  • The enterprise value formula is: Market Cap + Total Debt - Cash and Cash Equivalents
  • Investors use EV with metrics like EBITDA to compare stocks more fairly than market cap alone
Read More
April 8, 2026
Return on Equity: What It Is and How to Use It
  • Return on equity (ROE) measures how much profit a company earns for every dollar of shareholder equity
  • The formula is simple: net income divided by shareholder equity
  • A higher ROE can signal a company that is good at turning investor money into profit - but it is not the full picture
Read More
1 2 3 17
Share via
Copy link