Royal Mail delivery delays hit 15 UK postcodes today amid disruption


Royal Mail has issued a delivery disruption warning after delays have emerged across its network. The postal firm has confirmed that numerous areas throughout the UK will experience late deliveries.

As of Monday, May 11, disruptions are affecting 15 postcode regions. Areas include Daventry, Alfreton and Erskine. Royal Mail said: “We aim to deliver to all addresses we have mail for, six days a week.

“In a small number of local offices, this may temporarily not be possible due to local issues such as high levels of sick absence, resourcing, or other local factors.

“In those cases, we will rotate deliveries to minimise the delay to individual customers. We also provide targeted support to those offices to address their challenges and restore our service to the high standard our customers would normally receive.

“We’re sorry for any inconvenience and thank you for your understanding.” During the past 24 hours, Royal Mail’s air and road operations ran according to plan, reports the Mirror.

However, not all post was processed and sent to schedule during the weekend from the Truro Mail Centre. The company said: “Some mail posted in the TR postcode area on Friday for delivery to other parts of the UK on Saturday.”

The disruption comes as Royal Mail pledged to achieve its delivery targets by May 2027 as part of a £500million plan. The firm has faced complaints regarding delayed deliveries and was even issued with a penalty.

Royal Mail was handed a £21million fine by Ofcom in October after falling short of its targets, having delivered just 77% of First Class post and 92.5% of Second Class post on time in 2024-25.

Last month, Ofcom reduced the delivery targets for First Class post, lowering the next-day delivery requirement from 93% to 90%, while the Second Class three-day delivery target was cut from 98.5% to 95%.

Royal Mail has pledged to improve First Class Next Day delivery to approximately 85% within nine months, before hitting the 90% target set by regulator Ofcom within a year.

The postal giant also committed to delivering 93% of Second Class letters within three days over nine months, with a pledge to reach the 95% target by May next year.



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