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Home / Bay of Plenty Times

NZ Post allowed to cut number of delivery days, post shops after deed change

Raphael  Franks
Raphael Franks
Multimedia Reporter·NZ Herald·
6 Oct, 2025 10:24 PM3 mins to read

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New Zealand households receive, on average, fewer than two letters a week, compared to over seven 12 years ago. Photo / Duncan Brown

New Zealand households receive, on average, fewer than two letters a week, compared to over seven 12 years ago. Photo / Duncan Brown

New Zealand Post is now allowed to cut back the number of delivery days and post offices even further after a change to the deed it has with the Government.

The change was announced by the Ministry of Business, Employment and Innovation (MBIE) this morning.

NZ Post will only be required to deliver mail two days a week in urban areas, down from three, and three days a week in rural areas, down from five.

It will also be allowed to close 380 “service points”. However, NZ Post is not allowed to close rural retail locations for another year.

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Auckland Grey Power president Gillian Dance called it “unfortunate”. She said more upskilling will be necessary for some.

“For older people who don’t have electronic computers and rely on mail, this is just less communication for them.

“The times are changing, and many of our senior members are becoming computer literate, and they are being assisted in upskilling, and more of that will need to be done.”

Dance said she understood, however, that NZ Post needed to turn a profit.

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James Hartley, an MBIE general manager, said the new minimum service obligations in the deed “reflect how New Zealanders use the postal service today”.

He said people were using the postal service less, but NZ Post still had to maintain its network.

“New Zealanders are sending fewer letters than ever before. The average delivery point now receives less than two letters per week, compared to 7.5 in 2013. Despite being used less, NZ Post has been required to maintain a network designed for much higher volumes.

“Without these changes to NZ Post’s minimum service level obligations, the cost of maintaining current services would not be financially sustainable,” Hartley said.

NZ Post supported the changes.

“Mail is part of our DNA and will continue to be as long as New Zealanders continue to send letters,” NZ Post chief executive David Walsh said.

He stressed the deed change did not mean an automatic change to NZ Post’s delivery schedule.

“The Deed of Understanding sets out the minimum requirements that NZ Post needs to meet. We then make our operating decisions within those boundaries,” Walsh said.

“Any operational changes will include appropriate engagement with our people and stakeholders in the first instance,” he said.

The deed change gave NZ Post flexibility and enabled it to meet the Government’s expectations to provide a commercially sustainable mail service, Hartley said.

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NZ Post will likely look at cutting the number of post offices and post shops in urban areas. Hartley said the minimum requirements for retail outlets had not changed since 1989.

NZ Post has predicted New Zealand addresses will only receive an average of one item or less a week by 2028.

Parcel services are not covered by the deed and are not affected by the changes.

Raphael Franks is an Auckland-based reporter who covers business, breaking news and local stories from Tāmaki Makaurau. He joined the Herald as a Te Rito cadet in 2022.

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