How long does direct mail take? A production timeline from data to doorstep.

Everyone asks this eventually. Usually about a week before they actually need the mailing to land.

Here is the honest answer: a standard direct mail job, postcard, clean data, print-ready artwork, can be done in three to five working days from the moment we have everything we need. The same job, with artwork that needs fixing and a data file that has not been cleaned, takes two to three weeks. Sometimes more.

The difference is not us. It is the inputs.

I run production and dispatch at Mailings Direct. Every day I see jobs that could have been done in three days stretch to ten because something was not ready at the right time. Here is what the timeline actually looks like, and how to make sure yours stays at the fast end.

The five stages of a direct mail job

The five stages of a mailing
1
Data
Day 0 to 1
De-duplication, address validation, mortality screening, suppression. Clean file: a few hours. Messy file: up to a day.
Uncleaned lists carry 15–20% bad addresses
2
Artwork approval
Day 1 to 2
PDF/X-1a or X-4, CMYK, 3mm bleed, 300dpi+. Supply this and the job moves same day. Supply a Word doc or screen PNG and it stops.
Most common cause of delays
3
Print
Day 2 to 3
Digital run up to 5,000 pieces: one day on press. Litho runs 100k+: two to three days. Everything confirmed before 10am can be on press by mid-morning.
4
Finishing and addressing
Day 3 to 4
Drying, cutting, inkjet addressing, enclosing, Mailmark sortation. Standard postcard job: one working day.
5
Royal Mail delivery
Day 4 onwards
1st Class Advertising Mail: 2 to 3 working days. 2nd Class / Standard: 3 to 5 working days. Rural and Scottish Highlands can take longer.

The five stages of a mailing, and how long each one takes

Stage 1: Data (Day 0 to Day 1)

Before anything goes to press, the data has to be right. This means:

  • De-duplication: if the same address appears twice, you pay postage twice
  • Address validation: does the address actually exist? Can Royal Mail deliver to it?
  • Mortality screening: for consumer lists especially, do not mail to people who have died
  • Suppression: anyone who has asked to be removed needs to come off the file

If you supply a clean, validated file, this step takes us a few hours. If the file is messy (different address fields, missing postcodes, obvious duplicates) it takes longer. If it is a fresh-bought list that has not been cleaned recently, budget a day.

The number people do not like hearing: an uncleaned list that has not been touched in 18 months typically has around 15–20% bad addresses on it. That is wasted postage on every one of those pieces. Data is the cheapest part of a mailing and the part most often skipped. (For a full breakdown of what data cleaning costs relative to the rest of the campaign, see How much does a direct mail campaign cost in 2026?.)

Stage 2: Artwork approval (Day 1 to Day 2)

We need a print-ready file before anything goes to press. What that means in practice:

  • PDF/X-1a or PDF/X-4: the industry standard formats that print as intended
  • CMYK colour, not RGB: screens show RGB, presses print CMYK. If you supply RGB, the colours shift when we convert
  • 3mm bleed on all four sides: anything right to the edge of the design needs to extend slightly beyond the cut line, otherwise you get white margins when the cutter lands fractionally off
  • Text and logos at least 5mm from the trim line: so nothing gets accidentally cut off
  • Resolution at 300dpi or above: images that look fine on screen at 96dpi print blurry at 300dpi


If you supply a file like this, we can move to press the same day. If we receive a Word document, a PNG from a website, or an InDesign file with missing fonts, the job stops until that is resolved.

This is where most delays happen. Not on our end, on the artwork end. The mailing house is waiting.

If you are looking for some guidance on designing your postcard, you can find out ultimate postcard design guide here.

Print-ready artwork checklist: what to send and what not to send

Artwork: what to send
PDF/X-1a or PDF/X-4
Industry standard. Prints as intended every time.
CMYK colour
Not RGB. Colours shift on press if we have to convert.
3mm bleed all sides
Design extends beyond cut line. No white margins.
300dpi resolution
Looks fine on screen at 96dpi. Prints blurry below 300.
Text and logos 5mm from trim line
Keeps important elements from being accidentally cut off when the cutter lands fractionally off.
Word documents
Job stops until a proper file is supplied.
Screen-resolution PNGs
96dpi from a website prints blurry. Always.
InDesign with missing fonts
Export to PDF before sending. We can't package fonts for you.
RGB Canva exports
Canva can export CMYK PDF. Make sure you select it.
Stage 3: Print (Day 2 to Day 3)

A standard digital print run (A5 postcards, full colour both sides, up to around 50,000 pieces) runs in a day once it is on press. The prep work (colour proofing, imposition, machine setup) is the part that takes time, not the printing itself.

Larger litho runs for 100,000 pieces and above take longer, typically two to three days for print alone, because the makeready is more involved and the drying time between print and finishing is longer.

Same-day print dispatch is real, but it is not magic. If everything is confirmed before around 10am (clean data, approved artwork, payment cleared) a postcard job can be on press by mid-morning and in the post the same afternoon. We did 30,000 A5 postcards from print start to Royal Mail collection in one working day. But that only happens when everything is ready. The job does not pause while we wait for confirmation.

Stage 4: Finishing and addressing (Day 3 to Day 4)

Once print comes off press, the pieces need:

  • Time to dry: freshly printed sheets need to settle, especially with solid backgrounds on silk stock. Usually a few hours
  • Cutting: from press sheets to individual pieces
  • Inkjet addressing: for postcards and unenclosed pieces, your recipients’ details are printed directly onto the card
  • Enclosing: for letters: folding, inserting, sealing. Machine-enclosed is fast; anything non-standard (unusual insert sizes, multiple pieces) slows this down significantly
  • Sortation: Royal Mail’s Mailmark service requires mail to be presented sorted by postcode sector. We handle this. It is also what gets you the discounted rate

The whole finishing and addressing stage, for a standard postcard job, is usually one working day.

Stage 5: Royal Mail collection and in-home delivery (Day 4 onwards)

Once the job is with Royal Mail:

  • 1st Class Advertising Mail: most pieces deliver 2 to 3 working days after handover
  • 2nd Class / Standard Advertising Mail: typically 3 to 5 working days
  • Mailmark standard delivery: similar to 2nd Class, varies slightly by destination

This means: if your job leaves our dock on a Thursday, First Class recipients are likely to get it Monday or Tuesday the following week. Second Class, the following Wednesday or Thursday.

Royal Mail do not guarantee delivery windows for advertising mail the way they do for single-piece First Class letters. The figures above are typical rather than guaranteed, and rural routes and Scottish Highlands can take longer.

Key point: in-home date and despatch date are not the same thing. If you need mail arriving on a specific date (the day before a sale opens, the week before an event) count backwards from that date, not forwards from when you start the job.

What a realistic end-to-end timeline looks like

Realistic end-to-end timelines by scenario

Realistic timelines: brief to first delivery
Everything ready on day one (clean data, print-ready artwork)
2–3 days
Artwork needs minor fixes
3–5 days
Data needs cleaning and artwork needs work
5–7 days
Large litho run (100,000+ pieces)
7–10 days
Same-day dispatch (everything confirmed by 10am)
1 day + delivery

The mistakes that push timelines out

Five mistakes that push direct mail timelines out, with fixes

Mistakes that push timelines out
1
Sending artwork in the wrong format
InDesign with missing fonts or a Canva export at screen resolution. The job stops until a proper file arrives.
Fix: send PDF/X-1a. Forward this article to your designer before they start.
2
Waiting to confirm data until artwork is approved
Both can run at the same time. Serialising them loses a day minimum, often two.
Fix: start data cleaning the moment you brief the job.
3
Saying "we need it next week" without a specific date
"Next week" and "letterboxes by Wednesday" are very different briefs.
Fix: always give an in-home date. We work backwards from it.
4
No buffer on event-tied campaigns
Aiming to land on the day means a one-day Royal Mail slip kills the campaign. Five working days early absorbs normal variation.
Fix: aim to arrive five working days before your event, not on it.
5
Non-standard formats without flagging them
Unusual insert sizes and multiple enclosures that can't go through the machine add two to three days and cost more per piece.
Fix: flag non-standard formats at briefing, not after artwork is done.

After running dispatch for a few years, the same problems come up again and again.

Sending artwork in the wrong format. Nine times out of ten, the file that delays a job is an InDesign file with missing fonts or a Canva export at screen resolution. Send PDF/X-1a. If your designer is not familiar with that format, this article is worth forwarding to them before they send us the file.

Waiting to confirm the data until after artwork is approved. Both can be worked on at the same time. Waiting for one before the other loses a day minimum, sometimes two.

Assuming ‘we need it next week’ means the same thing to you and to us. Be specific about the in-home date and we work backwards from it. ‘Next week’ means nothing when what you actually need is letterboxes hit by the Wednesday.

Booking a mailing that is tied to an event without buffer. If the campaign is connected to a showroom opening, an end-of-offer date, or a seasonal window, do not aim to arrive on the day. Aim to arrive five working days before. That buffer absorbs the normal variation in Royal Mail delivery. If it arrives early, no problem. If it arrives on the planned day, great. If it slips by a day, you have not missed your moment.

Non-standard formats. Hand-fulfilled jobs — unusual insert sizes, multiple enclosures, items that cannot go through the machine — take longer and cost more per piece. If your format requires hand-fulfilment, budget an extra two to three days and flag it when you brief.

The one question worth asking before you brief

What is your cut-off for same-day dispatch?

For us it is around 10am for a standard postcard job with everything ready. Some mailing houses it is earlier; some do not offer it at all. Knowing that one number tells you whether the tight timeline you have in mind is achievable, before you have spent time on artwork and data.

If the timeline is tight, call before you finalise anything. We can usually tell you in a few minutes whether what you are trying to do is doable, and if it is not, what the closest realistic option is. No faff.

Frequently asked questions
How long does direct mail take from start to finish?
A standard postcard mailing with clean data and print-ready artwork takes 5 to 7 working days from brief to first delivery. If artwork needs fixing or data needs cleaning, budget 10 to 14 working days. Large litho runs of 100,000 pieces and above typically take 14 to 18 working days.
What is the fastest turnaround for direct mail?
Same-day dispatch is possible on standard postcard jobs if clean data, approved artwork, and payment are all confirmed before 10am. 1st Class Advertising Mail then delivers in 2 to 3 working days, so the fastest realistic in-home window is 3 to 4 working days from a standing start.
How long does Royal Mail take to deliver advertising mail?
1st Class Advertising Mail typically delivers in 2 to 3 working days after handover. 2nd Class and Standard Advertising Mail is typically 3 to 5 working days, though Royal Mail reduced 2nd Class delivery to three days per week from July 2025 under Ofcom reforms. Delivery windows are typical rather than guaranteed, and rural routes or Scottish Highlands addresses can take longer.
What is the cut-off time for same-day direct mail dispatch?
At Mailings Direct, the cut-off for same-day dispatch on a standard postcard job is around 10am, provided clean data, approved print-ready artwork, and cleared payment are all in place. Jobs confirmed after that point move to next-day dispatch.
Why is my direct mail taking longer than expected?
The most common causes are artwork supplied in the wrong format (Word documents, screen-resolution images, or InDesign files with missing fonts), data that needs cleaning before it can go to press, or both running one after the other rather than in parallel. Supplying a print-ready PDF and a validated data file on day one is the single biggest thing you can do to keep turnaround at the fast end.
What is the difference between despatch date and in-home date?
Despatch date is when the mailing leaves the production facility and is handed to Royal Mail. In-home date is when it lands in your recipients' letterboxes, which is 2 to 5 working days later depending on postage class. Always plan your campaign around the in-home date and work backwards, not forwards from when you start the job.
Ready to plan your mailing?
Tell us your in-home date and we will work backwards from it. Whether you have everything ready or you are starting from scratch, we can tell you in a few minutes what is achievable.

Chris Royston

The team at Mailings Direct offered excellent support to me when I first started my physiotherapy clinic. The combination of online marketing with direct mail was very effective in increasing demand for bookings – and at a reasonable cost with payment plans available to ease concerns for a start up business. Would highly recommend.

Chris Royston

CR Physiotherapy

David Colligan

I have been working with Dave and Vanessa for over 10 years. We entrust Mailings Direct with the mailsort, fulfilment and mailing of our monthly 9k circulation trade newspaper and we have always received great service. Running a mailsort programme is complicated and Dave is a complete expert in this subject.

David Colligan

Director: Ontarget Publishing

Gemma Langman

I have been working with Mailings Direct for a number of years now for all our direct mail marketing. They are always very efficient in getting everything out on time, even when we have last minute jobs for them that need a quick turnaround.

Gemma Langman

Communications and Events Manager , Salons Direct

Cheryl Gibbons

We at Trust green have been using this Mailings Direct for years and have been extremely happy with all the services they provide. Professional, efficient, friendly and always willing to work with us to meet any requirements we have. We will look forward to continuing to work with them in the future.

Cheryl Gibbons

Accounts , Trust Management

Simon Reynolds

We have worked with these guys for years for a variety of print and mail needs. They always go above and beyond and have helped turn around jobs very quickly for us on many occasions. A great service and great value. Above all – just a good, honest and hard working couple to deal with alongside their wider team. I would highly recommend.

Simon Reynolds

Managing Director, Patient Plan Direct