Suspension of Registered Postal Services: What It Means for Global E-commerce Shipping

As of January 1, registered international postal services with signature and proof of delivery are no longer consistently available for global e-commerce shipments.

Most national postal operators no longer provide reliable international registered delivery with enforceable proof of delivery suitable for e-commerce disputes.

What remains available is tracked-only postal shipping a service that allows shipment tracking but does not provide delivery confirmation, recipient signature, or legally valid proof of delivery.

For global e-commerce sellers, this is not a minor operational change.
It fundamentally alters risk, liability, and customer dispute exposure in cross-border shipping.

Registered vs. Tracked Shipping: Why the Difference Matters

Historically, registered postal services included:

  • end-to-end tracking
  • recipient signature upon delivery
  • proof of delivery (POD)
  • clearer liability in case of loss or dispute

Today’s tracked-only services provide:

  • shipment tracking ✔️
  • delivery event status ✔️
  • proof of delivery ❌
  • signature confirmation ❌

In practice, tracking does not equal proof of delivery.

If a shipment is marked as delivered but the customer claims non-receipt, sellers often cannot provide enforceable evidence to payment providers or marketplaces.

Why Postal Operators Removed Registered Services

This change is global, not country-specific.

Postal operators worldwide are under pressure from:

  • massive growth in cross-border e-commerce volumes
  • stricter customs, VAT, and import compliance rules
  • rising operational costs and dispute handling
  • increased financial risk tied to delivery claims

Registered delivery requires manual handling, signatures, documentation, and higher liability  a model that no longer scales in modern e-commerce.

Instead of upgrading registered services, postal systems chose to eliminate them entirely for international shipping.

Who Is Most Affected by This Change

The suspension of registered postal services mainly impacts:

  • international e-commerce sellers
  • DTC brands shipping cross-border
  • low- to mid-value parcels
  • businesses relying on postal services for affordability

Key risks for sellers include:

  • inability to prove delivery in chargebacks
  • higher “item not received” dispute rates
  • limited or capped compensation for losses
  • reduced control over last-mile delivery

This applies globally, shipments to Europe, North America, Asia, and beyond are all affected.

The Hidden Risk: Liability Without Proof

Tracked-only postal shipping creates a structural problem:

  • sellers remain responsible for successful delivery
  • postal operators limit liability
  • customers expect guaranteed delivery outcomes

When disputes arise, the seller typically absorbs the cost.

For high-volume e-commerce, this quickly becomes unsustainable, especially for businesses operating on thin margins or subscription-based models.

Young courier with packages looking for the right address while making home delivery.

Why E-commerce Is Moving Away From Postal Shipping

Modern e-commerce increasingly requires:

  • accountable last-mile delivery
  • contractual liability frameworks
  • delivery confirmation and POD
  • integrated customs and compliance handling

National postal systems were designed for mail and legacy parcel flows, not for today’s commercial e-commerce requirements.

As regulations tighten and dispute rates rise, reliance on postal shipping introduces operational and financial risk.

How SMS Fulfillment Helps E-commerce Sellers Reduce Risk

At SMS Fulfillment, international shipping is built around carrier-based, compliance-first logistics, not legacy postal infrastructure.

Our fulfillment model includes:

  • carrier solutions with delivery confirmation
  • defined liability and dispute handling
  • DDP-ready shipping workflows
  • proactive customs compliance
  • reliable last-mile delivery through trusted partners

This approach minimizes:

  • delivery disputes
  • unexpected fees for customers
  • service disruptions caused by regulatory or postal changes

Most importantly, it restores control and predictability to cross-border shipping operations.

What This Means for Your Shipping Strategy

If your business still relies on postal services for international e-commerce, it’s important to reassess the risk:

  • no proof of delivery
  • limited liability protection
  • growing exposure to disputes

Postal shipping is not disappearing, but it is no longer suitable for scalable, dispute-sensitive e-commerce operations.

The Bigger Picture for Global E-commerce

The suspension of registered postal services is a clear signal:
Global e-commerce logistics is shifting away from trust-based postal delivery toward contractual, compliance-driven fulfillment.

The real risk for online sellers isn’t higher shipping costs.
It’s operating in a system where delivery responsibility exists without delivery proof.

And that model no longer works.

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