Post Office Opening Hours | Pos Malaysia

pos_malaysia

Post Office Opening Hours | Pos Malaysia

(In Klang Valley)

Monday to Saturday : 8:30am – 5:00pm

Closed on Sunday and Public Holiday.

It also close on every First Saturday of the Month.

** This  opening hours do not apply to Post Office that are located at Shopping Complex.

I tried to Search the post office hour opening hours in Search Engine like Google and found out that It is very difficult to get the latest and correct post office hour opening hours.

For Extended Post Office Opening Hours especially at Shopping Complex , visit  Post Office Opening Hours For Busy People| Pos Malaysia


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  4. Malaysia Year End Sale 2009

15 Responses to “Post Office Opening Hours | Pos Malaysia”

  1. [...] Check out the Post Office Opening Hours | Pos Malaysia [...]

  2. are these the new opening hours for post office in the whole klang valley? they open on saturdays as well now?

  3. Yes :D

  4. [...] For normal opening office hour, please visit Post Office Opening Hours | Pos Malaysia [...]

  5. nicki fang chiew peng on October 10th, 2009 at 4:43 pm

    hi …

    i got a latter post from uk ..ly391584727gb by this number i wait 5 weeks already but still not here with me?

    i try to call uk there say already posted in malaysia already ?

    can someone checked it pls…

    so many thanks…!!!

  6. Saya hendak buat aduan tentang posmen yang berkhidmat di SS1/34, 47300 Kampung Tunku.

    Posmen ini tidak bertanggungjawab. Saya telah mengutip surat jauh dekat tong sampah.

    Dahulu pun saya telah mengutip surat saya dari longkang. Surat AAM put tidak sampai. Ada jiran yang telah sampaikan surat saya kerana tersalah masukkan dalam peti suratnya.

    Kalau tidak minat bekerja kenapa nak kerja.Bila mengatur surat biarlah di susun dahulu.

    Janganlah tersilap jatuh.

    Kalau Pejabat Besar mengambil kakitangan saperti ini malulah negara kita ini.

    Dan kalau dia pekerja sementara berilah traning dengan betul- betul.

    Pejabat pos telah mengumumkan bahawa ia akan berubah perkhidmatan,adakah ini caranya.Asik hendak nak tepuk Dada sendiri.

    Sekian, Terima kasih
    Gloria
    c.c. KEPADA jABATAN bURUH
    C.C. KEPADA pOS kAMPUNG tUNKU
    C.C. kEPADA pos Kelana Jaya

  7. i will like to know what time does the post office opening hours in kg.tunku petaling jaya. Thankyou

  8. hi Dinesh,

    I believe it’s the same time as above

    To confirm, Please call Pos Malaysia to find out.

  9. Stack of letters found near drain
    ———————————–

    A STACK of letters, mostly official ones, were discovered near a drain at a popular market in Jalan Bunga Tanjung 8 in Taman Muda Ampang on Monday morning.

    Trader Leong Seng Chong, 62, who found the un-delivered letters, said he immediately called Ampang municipal councillor Jennifer Tnew and handed them over to her.

    Yesterday, when Tnew and Teratai assemblyman Jenice Lee went back to the site to investigate further, they were informed by Leong that a man wearing a Pos Malaysia uniform was spotted lurking around the spot looking for something.

    “I tried to take a picture of him with my mobile phone but he became suspicious and went away. I think he came back for those letters,’’ Leong said.

    “This is not the first time this had happened. In fact, I received complaints that a stack of Hari Raya greeting cards were found in a rubbish bin near the same area last September,’’ Lee told reporters at the site yesterday.

    Lee said she was disappointed with the standard of service shown by Pos Malaysia and said that it needs to be overhauled.

    “I plan to bring this up in Parliament. Perhaps, a better solution is to break their monopoly and let others into the business to encourage competition,’’ she said, adding that the postal service was becoming unreliable with no improvement in sight.

    As an immediate solution, Lee said she was contemplating lodging a police report as she did not want be accused of disrupting the livelihood of anyone.

    “He (postman) is just a low ranking staff and who knows what was going through his mind, but Pos Malaysia needs to take a more holistic approach to resolve the matter,’’ Lee said.

    In a statement, Pos Malaysia Bhd said they were investigating the matter and would issue a statement soon.

    “We want to assure our customers and the public that Pos Malaysia Berhad has a zero tolerance policy towards the mistreatment of mail and we do not condone such irresponsible and deviant behaviour,” said its Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer Datuk Syed Faisal Albar.

    “We welcome all customers to contact our Customer Service Centre through PosLine at 1-300-300-300 from 8.30 am to 9.30pm, Monday to Saturday (except on first Saturday of the month) for any suggestions or comments.”

    fr:thestar.com.my/metro/story.asp?file=/2010/1/14/central/5457390&sec=central

  10. Dear Pos Malaysia,

    I would like to thank you for replying to my frustrated email regarding my complaint.

    I would like to thank you for your rules and procedures that absolutely cannot be ammended as you clearly lack the human touch. I did not realise that the center was manned by robots or perhaps, I was too boring or unimportant to entertain apparently.

    Thank you very much customer care consultant for mixing up my requests resulting in me being not eligible for a second delivery.

    Thank you for monopolies, for without it, I would say I would switch provider but no, I am not able to.

    You have shown such excellent courtesy to me. Thank you, thank you and thank you because your quality assurance team has proven my complaint to be not important and please dismiss it with talk of rules and procedures.

    you’re the best
    long live

  11. Round-the-clock auto postal service next
    ——-

    Postal services are going automated and mobile with the launch of the Pos-Automated-Machine (PAM) and Post-on-Wheels by Pos Malaysia.

    With the two new services, people can pay their bills and post letters and parcels faster and even after office hours.

    Pos Malaysia chairman Tan Sri Dr Aseh Che Mat said the PAM terminal, designed to function like a bank auto-teller machine, was the first of its kind.

    He said customers no longer need to queue up at the counter to buy stamps and post letters and parcels, and pay bills for various agencies as the PAM could perform such services.

    “The service will be of great convenience to the public as the services are available even after office hours,” Aseh told a press conference after launching and demonstrating the machine at the General Post Office here yesterday.

    “During the familiarisation stage, the operation hours for PAM shall be from 6am to 11.30pm from Monday to Sunday,” Aseh said.

    The Post-on-Wheels, akin to a mobile post office, operates via satellite connectivity for online transactions such as licence and road tax renewals besides the Amanah Saham unit trusts transactions and even international money transfer order services.

    The first Post-on-Wheels began its services along Jalan Duta here yesterday. The service will be extended throughout the country in stages.

    fr:thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/1/19/nation/5495732&sec=nation

  12. Let official mail be sent on time
    ———-

    I RECEIVED a letter from Kementerian Kewangan (bearing the phrase Urusan Seri Paduka Baginda) about a briefing that I was invited to attend on Jan 12.

    The date on the letter was Dec 29, 2009 (handwritten), the envelope bore a Jan 12, 2010 date stamp, and I received it on Jan 16.

    The issue is if the matter is urgent enough or serious enough to be placed in an envelope bearing Urusan Seri Paduka Baginda, then don’t you think it should be given due respect and sent on time?

    WORKING MALAYSIAN,
    George Town.

    fr:thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/1/19/focus/5492172&sec=focus

  13. Some tips and thoughts about good service

    EVERY now and then, when you step into a restaurant, you may come across a sign that says: “If our food is good, tell others. If our food is bad, tell us.”

    Getting people to know you, or your business, by word-of-mouth, is sometimes more effective than the most creative advertising campaign you can pay for.

    It’s the same with government departments as well. These days, hardly anyone ever complains about applying or renewing for passports, driving licences or MyKad.

    There is in fact a whole unpaid-for public relations machinery out there that tells people how fast and easy it is to get such documents.

    I have observed that good service is always about the personal touch. It is about people willing to take the extra step, to go out of the way, so that your needs are fulfilled.

    Recently, I had to send some important documents to Putrajaya. It was a public holiday in Selangor the following day and all the courier companies I contacted said they did not deliver that day.

    I told them Putrajaya was not on holiday so they suggested that I should use a courier company based in Kuala Lumpur instead.

    I called a few companies up but they could not guarantee that my documents would reach there by 4pm, which was the absolute deadline. So I turned to PosLaju.

    A quick search on its website revealed that it actually had a service called the Putrajaya Express, where items delivered to Putrajaya and Cyberjaya are guaranteed to arrive on the same day.

    So the next day, bright and early, I was at their Kuala Lumpur office in Brickfields even before it opened. I was the first customer but then I ran into a hitch. The counter clerk told me that although Putrajaya was not on holiday, Bangi, which is in Selangor, was.

    He explained that all the documents heading for Putrajaya are dropped at Bangi first before delivery to the government complex. “The office is closed,” he said. I pleaded with him. He could see I was quite literally on my knees so he called his supervisor.

    After some consultation, the supervisor told him to accept the documents and promised that it would be delivered the same day.

    I was so thankful that they were able to make a quick adjustment for my sake. Probably, he would have to instruct his van driver to make a special trip into Putrajaya that day.These two gentlemen went out of the way to solve a problem.

    To us, it may seem the most obvious thing to do, but if you have encountered other companies that go strictly by the rules, you will appreciate that they are the exception rather than the rule.

    And so, like what I said in the introduction, when the service is good, tell others. This one is for you, PosLaju.

    # Deputy executive editor Soo Ewe Jin feels people should share more about their positive experiences rather than just complain about things going awry, especially on a Monday.

    fr:biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/2/1/business/5566877&sec=business

  14. thx for your information.

  15. Pos Malaysia seeks to stay relevant in cyber age

    Efforts are underway to ensure Pos Malaysia remains a major player in Malaysia’s postal industry despite the fact that a growing number of people are now into electronic communication, Information Communication and Culture Minister Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim said.

    He said Malaysia was not spared this phenomenon as more people became Internet-savvy.

    “We expect a decline in the number of mail items sent through the postal service as more people prefer to communicate via the worldwide web,” he said after visiting United Kingdom’s postal authority, the Royal Mail, here where he met its chief of strategic planning, John Duncan.

    Describing the visit as an eye-opener, Rais said the ministry would prepare a report to the cabinet on how to make the postal service more efficient in terms of cost. The report would also cover efforts to determine the actual cost of postal services, he said.

    “We will see whether any increase in costs commensurate the level of service received by the people.”

    “We will also see, for instant, the position of our postmen. We will also look into the challenge posed by the Internet and other means of communications as well as how to rekindle the culture of writing letters,” Rais, who is on a three-day visit here, said.

    The report would also touch on the short and long-term measures to ensure Pos Malaysia continue to be the main player in the country’s postal industry.

    Efforts would also be made to expand the use of stamps, one of the postal service’s sources of revenue, in cultural and commercial terms.

    “We should also look into new area of businesses related to the postal service,” he added.

    Rais said that in the UK, there was a decline in the number of items sent through the post — by 7 per cent or about 3.5 billion items in 2009 compared to the number in 2006.

    The trend was expected to continue, he said, adding however that based on the Royal Mail experience, consumers continued to use the postal service to send packages.

    Also present were Pos Malaysia Bhd Group Managing Director Datuk Syed Faisal Albar and Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission Chairman Tan Sri Khalid Ramli.

    fr:themalaysianinsider.com/index.php/business/53064-pos-malaysia-seeks-to-stay-relevant-in-cyber-age

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