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Roll of postage labels are designed to create postage from the Internet. Simply print off the USPS-approved postage you need with your Dymo LabelWriter.
Chris K
2025-09-06 19:37:06
We have been needing a label maker for a long time. My secretary used to just use the Avery labels and run them to the printer. We wanted a faster and easier way to make labels. After reading reviews, we decided to try this machine.In addition, I have been resenting our Pitney Bowes machine for a long time. It's very expensive, and when they tried to make me pay insurance on it, I showed them my insurance, and so I didn't send in the money for their own insurance. They charged me a late fee on the fact I didn't pay the whole bill! Anyway, this is not intended to be a rant against PB but I have been keeping my eyes open for an alternative for a long time.Years ago we tried stamps.com but we couldn't get it to work for us. I even looked at DYMO in the past but I don't think you could print every amount of postage at that time. When I looked at it again, I decided to give it a try.My biggest concern was what other people were saying about the machine spitting out labels or jamming labels. Between my secretary and I, we loaded the labels and after a short try, we installed them tightly. We had to figure out to install the stamps so they went through the left side of the feeder and it has worked great. We haven't refilled any of the labels yet.We just connected the scale, and you can figure out postage right from the software.We are now cancelling the Pitney Bowes machine and love the labelmaker. It works fine with Windows 7, too!UPDATE:After trying this for a a few months,I need to report that everything is going great. My secretary tells me that I made a good choice with this machine even though she resented having to learn a new procedure at first. Now, we are trying stamps not made by DYMO and they are nearly 1/10th of the cost. We will see how the labels perform.
J. N.
2025-04-05 12:13:24
Lots of bad reviews here, but they all seem to boil down to cost. Yes, it costs 9-10 cents per label. If you have high mailing needs, yes look elsewhere or at other plans. For me, after 15 years of spending way too much for a PB meter, ink and other costs, the Dymo solution works fantastic. A very small investment up front, then a minor 10 cents a pop. I only mail 10-30 pieces a month but I prefer a professional look and the convenience of buying postage online when needed. So instead of ~$30 month for a PB meter, plus ink costs, postage refill costs, etc., this is an incredibly cheap and convenient solution for my business mailing needs. After 6 months, it has worked flawlessly, and I've burned about 10 bucks worth of labels - big deal! Beats the $200+ I used to pay PB.
James Hendrix Jr.
2025-01-01 13:54:36
I set up a free account with Endicia several years ago. Always bought my stamps on Amazon.com. But have had problems getting Dymo Stamps to accept the serial numbers, although they were genuine. Always had to call them and they always waved their magic want and things worked well until the next time. This time, Dymo Stamps balked before I finished a roll. So, I jumped through the hoop again. But, this time they wanted me to send them pictures of the front and back of a strip of the stamps. When they said it should work, it didn't, so another round of emails was needed to get it going. I have a new roll on the shelf that they have approved. But I have no confidence it will work with one or two email exchanges. When I griped about this, Endicia recommended that I purchase my stamps directly from them through the Dymo Stamps program, as that would automatically approve the roll without me having to enter the activation code. The ploy is obvious, but what counts is the price difference. So, here is what I found. Getting my stamps from Amazon.com with free Prime shipping costs $17.58 for a roll of 200 stamps. So, I am paying 8.8 cents per stamp for the convenience of printing stamps on demand. But, I have to jump through hoops to get them activated. Directly from Endicia, the price is $20.95 for 200 stamps, or 10.5 cents per stamp, an increase of 21% or 1.7 cents per stamp. I can't speak for you, but for me, the convenience of printing stamps on demand and not jumping through hoops is worth the premium. My volume is low, so it will not break the bank. Much as I cringe at giving in to shady marketing tactics, I'll purchase future stamp rolls directly through the Dymo Stamps program. The only other choice out there is Stamps.com. I tried them and gave it up because their software is clumsy and they will not print on my Dymo printers. I love my Dymo printers. They are rock solid and never need maintenance. Bottom line in marketing...people will pay anything for convenience. Yep!
Tarzan Jane
2024-12-21 11:42:22
Outrageous, unaffordable Extortion, FORCED mark-up on Postage labels supplies, Dymo outlawed fair competition. 10-12 cents, for a penny adhesive label? $22.00 for a roll of 200,in addition, so many labels misprint, spit out multiple wasted blank in error, advance button easily touched, bad location to intentionally ruin labels, or voided for test printing as the roll gets unaligned kinked, so there are loss of many labels, about 25 that are wasted of the 200. So a roll actual yield about 175, not 200. . Cost of a 48 cents plus up to**(((( 12 cents)))*** for waste = 60 cents for first class??? Criminal mark up costs. After this roll is used, I will NEVER BUY and toss machine., never to be forcibly exhorted another highest priced roll again, additional 12 cents plus cost of prevailing postage is NOT reasonable to make any sense, even for convenience. .. Back to face value stamps for me. Dymo UNETHICAL and IMMORAL high price point will put them out of business! This is the worst gouging I've seen in a consumer product, without any competition. Anti-Trust Laws are clearly being violated.
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