Helping to give buyers and sellers more visibility for the smallest of orders
Disclaimer: Tracking data is provided through the USPS Informed Visibility Mail Tracking & Reporting (IV-MTR) system. While this system offers enhanced tracking for letter and flat mail, it is not guaranteed to be 100% accurate and may occasionally miss scans. Your order may still be in transit even if no updates are shown, as factors such as barcode placement or processing conditions can prevent successful scans. Please refer to the information below for additional details.
* It may take 24 hours for before scans show up, longer for weekends. *
Where's My TCG? was created to provide buyers and sellers with visibility into the journey of First Class Letters and Flats sent through the United States Postal Service (USPS) for TCGplayer orders. Traditionally, tracking is only available for packages, which makes it cost-effective only for high-value items. As a result, lower-value trading cards are often shipped in plain white envelopes without tracking, leaving both parties in the dark about the status of their orders.
This lack of transparency forces sellers to rely on the buyer's honesty regarding whether the item was received, creating uncertainty and potential disputes.
Where's My TCG? solves this problem by leveraging USPS’s Informed Visibility (IV) system, introduced in 2018. This service enables commercial mailers—including marketplaces and sellers—to track smaller mail pieces using special barcodes. These barcodes are scanned as the mail moves through the USPS network, providing tracking updates all the way to the destination.
USPS uses a mixture of tools and systems to complete the tracking data. Though physical scans through the automation machines, as well as "assumed" and "logical" events they can determine where your letter is. Assumed events are when a letter is placed into a shipping container, or other handling unit, and moves from destination to destination. When the container is recorded as moved, so will the letter. For logical events, mail carrier hand-held devices and vehicles both have GPS tracking data along with geo-fencing technologies. When a mail carrier enters a specific area that matches the letter's destination, it can be marked as delivered.