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Danish postal service to stop delivering letters after 400 years

64 pointsby hackerbeattoday at 1:25 AM40 commentsview on HN

Comments

arbirktoday at 3:02 AM

Just to clarify. There is at least one chosen and contractually bound Mail Service provider in Denmark. Their terms are set in public tenders. The old state owned company - Post Nord - basically decide not to compete for the contract. A newer company - DAO - won the tender. What this means in legal terms:

Under law: DAO must comply with its postal permit obligations (nationwide service where offered, pricing transparency, quality monitoring). But there is no absolute legal universal delivery duty for all mail anymore.

Under government contract: DAO has a specific binding duty to deliver blind mail as defined in the tender it won - this is a contractual obligation, not a general statutory duty for all mail.

Be mindful that in principle the service provider could chose to not cover certain parts of the country. That has to be clearly stated in their terms of service. The Danish government are expected by the public to continue to subsidize delivery to people with special needs, in the contract identified as "blind mail"

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bigfatkittentoday at 2:00 AM

So if I’m in Denmark and I want to send my friend a piece of paper with something written on it, what happens now?

I assume I have to go into the post office and send it as a parcel (at higher cost), rather than slapping a stamp on it and dropping it into the post box, but the effect is otherwise mostly the same.

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ursAxZAtoday at 1:55 AM

We keep optimizing systems, but human life doesn’t necessarily optimize along with them.

When a society becomes fully efficient, people start craving the slow, the physical, the intentional.

mkromantoday at 5:12 AM

What I don't see mentioned here or in the article:

PostNord Denmark has been operating with massive losses for a while now, in part because they were required by law to be able to deliver everywhere in Denmark, when there were very little demand for it. The money just isn't there, which is why the law has been changed.

The cost of sending a letter was also just going up and up. In 2025, it cost $4.55 _per letter_.

foolserrandboytoday at 2:47 AM

Will companies be willing to pay more to send junk mail if it is no longer largely subsidized? In this regard it could be a good thing assuming they don’t already have a regulation against junk mail there.

Beijingertoday at 3:22 AM

There is nothing worse, than a rotten mail delivery system:

https://expatcircle.com/cms/underrated-quality-of-life-indic...

Many USPS outlets seem to be run down. But in my experience, mail delivery is pretty solid. And there is indeed a country without postal mail service. Panama!

FarmerPotatotoday at 1:57 AM

Fifty years ago, I was given a coin bank styled after the red Danish Post letter box. That was in Solvang, CA. As these Danish immigrant-character communities (look also in Elkhorn, Racine, Greenville, etc) are little time capsules, you may have to travel to America to find a replica red slot to drop your letter.

The article wasn't clear how letters from outside Denmark will be handled, but maybe that's implicit in the Dao contract.

EDIT: maybe Royal Mail was never the Danish term, but I thought it was on a Lego set too...

WalterBrighttoday at 2:23 AM

It's been decades since I wrote a letter and mailed it.

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usr1106today at 3:53 AM

Slightly related: In Finland all official mail from authorities will become electronic by default starting Jan 1st, 2026. There is the possibility to opt out. I am not convinced this is a wise direction. When Putin cuts a couple of sea cables again we are not able to access official communications. Yes, even elections are stored offshore.

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grugagagtoday at 2:22 AM

Mail will arrive straight at the museum

SilverElfintoday at 4:49 AM

I know some people are mentioning a private provider who will be around. But they will charge a lot I’m sure, and this will continue to kill the practice of writing letters or sending greeting cards. It’s a bit sad knowing people will forget the value of a personal touch, and they’ll not know what they lost when all they do is send each other a text message or whatever.

ChrisArchitecttoday at 3:27 AM

Previously when it was announced earlier this year:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43278934

ChrisArchitecttoday at 3:13 AM

When this came up earlier in the month (Denmark gets ready to cancel Christmas cards https://www.economist.com/europe/2025/11/27/denmark-gets-rea... ) it seemed more like PostNord was just stepping back opening the market up to other 'rivals' to continue service.

jmclnxtoday at 2:35 AM

So, all they did was privatize their postal service. There will still have a postal service, but run by a private company.

I doubt this will end well, but Denmark is a small country so maybe it will work.

After a year it would be nice to see stats and compare delivery time, lost mail, cost between Dao and the old service,

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black_13today at 5:04 AM

[dead]