Royal Mail launches scanner for counterfeit stamps

30 July 2024, 15:04

First and second class stamps
Stamps. Picture: PA

The company also confirmed it would continue to waive £5 penalties for members of the public to collect post with counterfeit stamps.

Royal Mail has launched a scanner within its app to allow customers to check if a stamp is a counterfeit.

Customers who scan the stamp’s barcode will be told whether it is a recognised counterfeit or not.

People who did not buy their stamps from Royal Mail, the Post Office or another reputable high street outlet are advised to scan them before use.

Royal Mail confirmed it would continue to waive £5 penalties for members of the public to collect post with counterfeit stamps and try to locate and charge the sender.

It also announced it has appointed an independent arbitrator in cases requiring resolution involving the £5 surcharge.

This will involve the arbitrator examining the physical stamp identified by Royal Mail as being counterfeit.

Customers cannot send their stamps directly to the arbitrator without first going through the Royal Mail complaints process.

Royal Mail chief commercial officer Nick Landon said: “We continue to do all we can to protect our customers from the scourge of counterfeit stamps, and since introducing barcoded stamps we have reduced the number of counterfeit stamps in our network by around 90%.

“The new counterfeit stamp scanner on the Royal Mail app will help prevent customers inadvertently falling victim to stamp fraud.

“We want our customers to buy stamps with confidence and always recommend that customers only purchase stamps from Post Offices and other reputable retailers or the official Royal Mail shop.”

The Daily Telegraph reported in April that China was allegedly flooding Britain with counterfeit Royal Mail stamps.

The newspaper reported that sources close to Royal Mail said fakes from the Asian country were causing a rise in complaints that stamps bought from legitimate stores were being deemed fraudulent, which can result in the £5 penalty.

The newspaper identified four Chinese suppliers offering to print up to one million counterfeit Royal Mail stamps a week, to be sold for as little as 4p each ahead of delivery to Britain.

The fakes had also been found on Amazon and eBay, and websites copying the Royal Mail official store, the newspaper said.

The Telegraph understood the stamps were being bought unknowingly by small retailers, who are allowed to buy stamps from wholesalers rather than from Royal Mail directly.

A spokesman from the Chinese embassy in London called the claims “absurd”.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Sir Nick Clegg

Clegg leaves Meta role as Republican promoted ahead of Trump presidency

A Polestar 4 electric car

Does the Polestar 4 offer a glimpse of the cars of the future?

The Duchess of Sussex

Meghan returns to Instagram with beach video

The app intervenes when smoking is detected (University of Bristol/PA)

Smartwatch technology could help people quit smoking, study finds

Elon Musk

Downing Street rejects Musk’s suggestion companies are turning away from UK

A person using their phone at a pedestrian crossing

Predicting the future in 1999: Tech predictions 25 years on

Manny Wallace, known as Big Manny on TikTok, smiling and standing inside a science lab

TikToker teaching science hopes short-form video will become part of curriculum

An information screen in the South Terminal at Gatwick Airport (PA)

How the CrowdStrike outage made IT supply chains the new big issue in tech

The Airbnb app icon

Airbnb activates ‘defences’ to stop unauthorised New Year parties

Artificial Intelligence futuristic light sign

Regulations needed to stop AI being used for ‘bad things’ – Geoffrey Hinton

Elon Musk

How Elon Musk’s influence has grown both online and offline in 2024

Hands holding the iPhone 16

How smartphones powered the AI boom in 2024

London skyline

US investor to snap up maritime AI specialist Windward for £216m

Donald Trump

How will a second Trump presidency impact the tech world in 2025?

Morning drone (002)

Drone project reaches ‘important milestone’ with final trial flights

Prime Minister hosts Chanukah reception

AI tech giants should not be subsidised by British creatives, Starmer signals