USPS Pay Schedule 2026 — All 27 Pay Dates
The United States Postal Service pays its employees on a biweekly schedule, and 2026 is a special year for postal workers because it contains 27 pay periods instead of the usual 26. This happens approximately once every 11 years due to the way 14-day pay cycles accumulate across the 365-day calendar. For USPS employees, this means an extra paycheck in 2026, which can have implications for budgeting, tax withholding, and benefits deductions.
All USPS paydays in 2026 fall on Fridays with two notable exceptions. Pay Period 13 (PP13) is moved to Thursday, June 18, because Juneteenth (June 19) falls on a Friday and is a federal holiday. Similarly, Pay Period 27 (PP27) is adjusted to Thursday, December 31, due to the proximity of New Year's Day 2027. These shifts ensure that employees receive their wages before holiday-related bank closures delay processing.
Three months in 2026 will deliver three paychecks for USPS employees: January, July, and December. In a typical month, biweekly employees receive two paychecks, but the 27-period year pushes three pay dates into each of those months. Financial advisors often recommend treating the third paycheck as a bonus opportunity — since your fixed monthly expenses remain the same, the extra check can be directed entirely toward savings goals, emergency funds, or debt repayment.
The 2026 USPS leave year begins on January 10, 2026, which is the start of Pay Period 03 (PP03). The leave year is important because it determines the annual leave accrual cycle and the deadline for using excess leave that cannot be carried over. Most career postal employees can carry over up to 440 hours of annual leave from one leave year to the next. Any hours above that threshold at the end of the leave year are forfeited unless the employee qualifies for restored leave under specific circumstances such as an exigency of service or administrative cancellation.
Leave accrual rates for USPS employees depend on years of creditable service. Employees with fewer than 3 years earn 4 hours per biweekly pay period (104 hours annually). Those with 3 to 15 years earn 6 hours per period (156 hours). Employees with 15 or more years earn 8 hours per period (208 hours). In a 27-pay-period year, the extra period does not change the annual accrual total — the per-period accrual rate is adjusted slightly downward so the yearly total remains the same.
Direct deposit is the standard payment method for USPS employees, and funds are typically available in bank accounts by the morning of the scheduled pay date. Some banks and credit unions that offer early direct deposit may make funds available one or even two days before the official payday. Postal employees can view their pay stubs and earnings statements through the USPS LiteBlue portal or PostalEASE system.
For the official USPS pay schedule and leave calendar, visit the LiteBlue portal or contact your local Human Resources Shared Service Center. Union publications from NALC, APWU, and NPMHU also typically publish the pay calendar at the start of each year.