
Tips.Net > WordTips Home > Printing > Envelopes > Printing Post Office Permits on Envelopes
Summary: When preparing to snail-mail information, you may want to print your envelopes with permit information in the upper-right corner. How you add such a permit to an envelope depends on whether it consists of text or a graphic. This tip explains both ways to add the desired information. (This tip works with Microsoft Word 97, Word 2000, Word 2002, Word 2003, and Word 2007.)
It is not uncommon for people who do lots of mailing to purchase a bulk-mail permit from the Post Office. You pay the local Post Office an annual fee, and they grant you a permit number which you can use for your mailings, in lieu of stamps. (You still have to pay them, of course. You just don't need to put a stamp on each piece you want to mail.)
With the permit in hand, it is normal to print the permit number in the upper right corner of the envelope, where the stamp is normally located. The verbiage is typically something like "US Postage Paid Phoenix, AZ Permit No. 555." The exact wording can vary, depending on what you are mailing and the exact type of permit you are using.
You can either place the permit text within a text box, or you can create a graphic that contains the permit text. The text box or graphic can then be placed on the envelope you are using. If you are using Mail Merge to create your envelopes, you can place the graphic or text box on the envelope just before the merge, so it will be there on each created document.
If you plan on using a text box to hold your permit information, the following general steps will help in creating the envelopes properly:
That's it! Your placeholder is on your envelope, and you are ready to print. If you want to place a graphic on the envelope instead of a text box, then you can follow these general steps:
You should now be able to print your envelopes (or do your Mail Merge) as desired.
Tip #1895 applies to Microsoft Word versions: 97 2000 2002 2003 2007
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