Map reveals the postcodes losing Canada Post door-to-door delivery this year | Page 900 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: National Post
Author: Ellie Hutchings
Publication Date: April 17, 2026 - 11:53

Stay informed

Map reveals the postcodes losing Canada Post door-to-door delivery this year

April 17, 2026

Canada Post has announced that 13 communities across the country, encompassing 31 postcodes, will no longer receive door-to-door delivery and instead transition to community mailboxes, starting later this year.

The first batch of addresses being converted to community mailboxes is mostly concentrated in Vancouver and elsewhere in B.C., but several areas in Winnipeg, Ottawa, Etobicoke and Moncton and Riverview will also be affected, along with three postcodes in Quebec.

In total, 136,000 addresses will be converted from door-to-door delivery to community mailboxes in late 2026 and early 2027.

The change is part of the corporation’s efforts to cut costs and improve long-term financial sustainability, following years of significant losses.

Canada Post plans to phase out household delivery entirely over the next five years, with additional areas moving to community mailboxes each year.

The postcodes set to be converted in the first phase are:

  • Moncton and Riverview, N.B.: E1B, E1C, E1E, E1G
  • Sept-Îles, Que.: G4R, G4S
  • La Prairie and Candiac, Que.: J5R
  • Ottawa: K1B, K1G, K1H, K1J, K1K
  • Etobicoke, Ont.: M9V, M9W.
  • Winnipeg: R2P, R2R, R2V, R2W, R2X, R3E, R3H.
  • Abbotsford, B.C.: V2S, V2T
  • Mission, B.C.: V2V
  • North Vancouver and West Vancouver: V7M, V7P, V7R, V7S, V7T, V7V, V7W

Nearly three-quarters of Canadian addresses already receive mail through some form of centralized delivery (such as community mailboxes, apartment and condo lobby boxes, and post office boxes), Canada Post said in a news release on Thursday.

However, about four million addresses still receive door-to-door delivery.

The corporation added that it plans to engage with communities as it identifies suitable locations for community mailbox sites, and will keep residents informed throughout the transition.

Meanwhile, most of the addresses selected for the first phase of conversion are adjacent to areas already served by community mailboxes.

Dense urban areas will be addressed in later stages of the multi-year conversion program, which will ultimately result in annual savings of more than $400 million, Canada Post said.

The corporation’s financial situation has deteriorated dramatically in recent years. In September 2025, a statement from the federal government announced that the service had accumulated more than $5 billion in losses since 2018, losing over $1 billion in 2024 alone. It also reported its worst quarterly results ever, losing $407 million, in the second quarter of 2025.

But now, Canada Post claims to have “reached a turning point”.

It said in Thursday’s release: “Canada Post’s transformation will strengthen the postal service, allow it to be a better partner for businesses, enable national commerce, and help it meet its dual mandate of delivering for all Canadians without being a recurring burden on taxpayers.”

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.



Unpublished Newswire

 
To Davis Schneider, his older brother Steven was "kind of like a Superman."
April 29, 2026 - 07:22 | Globalnews Digital | Global News - Ottawa
A Yellowknife judge has insisted a man who claimed to be Caucasian get a report meant for Indigenous offenders before he sentences him for breaking into a hotel. Jeremy Kuneyuna — who already has 90 convictions — appeared in the Territorial Court of the Northwest Territories recently to be sentenced for breaking into a hotel. “Mr. Kuneyuna states that he is ‘Caucasian’ and on that basis has provided no information relating to case specific factors relating to his background as an indigenous offender,” Judge Robert David Gorin wrote in an April 22 decision. “When I asked him about why...
April 29, 2026 - 07:00 | Chris Lambie | National Post
On March 17, 2021, Parliament passed Bill C-7, which repealed the “reasonable foreseeability of natural death” criterion to allow medical assistance in dying (MAID) for people who might otherwise live naturally, if intolerably, for decades. The bill also excluded from eligibility people with mental illness as their sole underlying medical condition. The exclusion was to be repealed automatically two years later but was deferred by Parliament to 2024 and subsequently deferred again to March 17, 2027. Mohamad Elfakhani is the chief of psychiatry at the London Health Sciences Centre,...
April 29, 2026 - 06:30 | Kevin Andrew Heslop | Walrus