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August 20, 2021

Top tip to save on early holiday shopping rush with new shipping fees

WATCH: Why you may want to start your holiday shopping in August

Summer may not be quite over but a new consumer alert could mean it's time to get a head start on holiday shopping plans.

Several mail carriers across the country have announced new price increases which will roll out in the coming months.

PHOTO: A young couple holds shopping bags in this undated stock photo.
STOCK PHOTO/Getty Images
A young couple holds shopping bags in this undated stock photo.

FedEx, UPS and the United States Postal Service have all announced temporary peak surcharges with fees coming later in the fall.

FedEx announced a $1.50 per piece price hike for Ground Economy packages. The USPS announced a .25 cent to $5.00 increase depending on the type of product and its weight. Both surcharges will take effect between October and January 2022.

The new price increases come on the heels of a nearly year and a half of living through the pandemic, which left mail carriers to deal with labor shortages and increased demand due to a rise in online shopping.

Hitha Herzog, chief research officer for H Squared Research, told "Good Morning America" that the issue facing retailers is getting products to stores.

PHOTO: In this April 30, 2020 packages fill a basket to the brim before being loaded into trucks to depart on delivery routes at the Remcon Circle United States Postal Service Post Office in El Paso, Texas.
Paul Ratje/AFP via Getty Images, FILE
In this April 30, 2020 packages fill a basket to the brim before being loaded into trucks to depart on delivery routes at the Remcon Circle United States Postal Service Post Office in El Paso, Texas.

"The real challenge comes from how the products are getting to the stores," she said. "There aren't enough truck drivers -- there's not enough cargo trains, so it becomes a logistics issue."

New delivery surcharges will add pressure to retailers across the country as they decide whether to absorb the price hikes or pass them on to consumers.

The best way to be sure to beat the shipping trouble this holiday season is to buy early and plan ahead, Herzog said.

"I'm telling anyone who is going out and shopping to go out there as soon as they possibly can," Herzog suggested. "As you get closer to the holiday season, you're really taking your chances of what's going to be on those aisles."