Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
GhostPostal.com is a service for creating and mailing physical postcards online. Users can upload their own photos or use the site’s image library, add a written message and recipient address, and the provider then sends the postcard via the U.S. Postal Service. Its main selling point is not enterprise-grade communications, but “anonymous physical delivery”: the site says anonymity is achieved through the postmark, allowing senders to express a message either secretly or openly.
In terms of delivery channel, this is traditional physical postal mail, not email, SMS, voice, or an IM platform, so it is not suitable for real-time notifications, verification codes, marketing automation, or similar communications use cases. For coverage, the copy explicitly says it supports mailing within the United States and internationally, but it does not list specific countries, restricted regions, or cross-border delivery times. On performance, it only states that delivery is handled by the U.S. Postal Service; it does not disclose delivery rates, estimated arrival times, tracking numbers, return handling, or an SLA. That is a clear drawback for time-sensitive messages.
Pricing is very straightforward: $3.99 per postcard within the United States and $6.99 per postcard internationally, using a per-item pricing model. For occasional personal use, the cost is manageable and saves time compared with designing, printing, and stamping a postcard yourself. However, the website copy does not provide details on payment methods, discounts, bulk pricing, or refund rules. API and integration capabilities are not mentioned at all, and there is no information about bulk uploads, CRM integrations, webhooks, or automation interfaces, so it should be treated as a manual service aimed at individual users.
The main advantage is the low barrier to use: the process can be completed in three steps—choose an image, write a message, and enter an address. A physical postcard can also serve as a keepsake, making the service suitable for thank-you cards, invitations, emotional messages, playful notes, or reminder-style use cases. The downside is limited service transparency, especially around delivery tracking, customer support, content compliance, and privacy policy details. While anonymity is a selling point, it may also create risks of harassment, threats, or other misuse, so businesses or anyone sending formal notices should use it with caution.
The copy does not provide information about access from mainland China, payment availability, or the stability of cross-border mailing to China, so these factors can only be marked as unknown. Domestic users looking for a similar service could consider customized postcard mailing or photo-printing-and-mailing services on Chinese e-commerce platforms. For international postcard platforms, Postable and Touchnote are possible comparisons. Overall, GhostPostal.com is best suited for low-frequency, non-urgent, personal anonymous paper-based communication, and is not appropriate as a reliable business communications infrastructure.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on ghostpostal.com official site.
ghostpostal.com is an United States Print-on-Demand provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $3.99, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach ghostpostal.com directly.