The Post Office just stopped sending $200 million checks to its pension fund every two weeks. Postmaster General David Steiner warned Congress that without major changes, USPS could be completely out of money by February 2027.
He called it a "severe financial crisis." The numbers back him up.
What the Suspension Actually Does
USPS halted its employer contributions to the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) - the defined benefit pension that covers hundreds of thousands of postal workers. The move frees up roughly $2.5 billion this fiscal year.
Employee payroll deductions still transfer into retirement accounts.
Current and future retirees won't see an immediate impact. But the longer the suspension lasts, the bigger the hole in the pension fund grows.
Think of it like a family cutting back on retirement savings just to cover this month's rent. It solves today's emergency while creating tomorrow's problem.
Declining Mail Revenue Is the Root Cause
USPS is caught between collapsing letter volume and legal obligations to pre-fund pensions - something most private businesses don't have to do. Fewer people mail things every year, and that trend isn't reversing.
Even with the pension freeze, USPS is also pushing for a four-cent stamp price increase. Higher postage means fewer mailings. Fewer mailings mean lower revenue. Lower revenue means a deeper crisis.
What to Watch
Congress needs to restructure how USPS pension obligations work, or the agency will keep cannibalizing itself to survive. Without reform, this buys 12-18 months at best.
