Standard
$600/month
One-time utility service setup fee: $200.
Security deposit: $1,200.
Updated June 10, 2026
The current TruLease pricing update changes the decision. If you only need mail scanning or forwarding, start with ordinary mailbox service. If you need lease-style business-address documentation for banking, merchant accounts, Stripe, marketplace, or company-record friction, analyze TruLease as a higher-cost address product.
Based on a VirtualPostMail partner update received June 10, 2026, TruLease pricing is now:
$600/month
One-time utility service setup fee: $200.
Security deposit: $1,200.
$4,200/year
Equivalent to $350/month before considering cash timing and plan terms.
Annual customers receive a $200 annual credit that offsets the utility service setup fee.
When early termination is approved, the early termination fee is now $1,400.
Confirm the current terms directly before relying on any plan.
At the new price, TruLease should not be treated as a casual add-on. It is closer to a business-address infrastructure decision.
The Standard plan has a higher monthly cost and a larger upfront burden because the first-month cash requirement can include monthly service, setup fee, and security deposit. The Annual plan lowers the monthly equivalent, but it asks the customer to commit more money upfront and think about early termination risk.
That does not make TruLease bad. It means the buyer should know exactly which problem it solves before paying.
Use the TruLease category when the issue is not just "I need mail." The stronger fit is when the customer needs business-address documentation or lease-style address support for a specific receiving party.
Bank account review
Merchant account review
Stripe or platform verification
Marketplace onboarding
Company-record address friction
Business-address documentation
If the customer only needs mail receiving, scanning, forwarding, or ordinary private mailbox service, TruLease may be overbuilt and too expensive.
For a broader comparison against virtual mailbox, virtual office, and residential-style address products, use the address-product comparison guide.
Start with the basic address role:
Use mailbox/CMRA analysis. Ask about USPS Form 1583, PMB format, scanning, forwarding, and termination.
Use registered-agent analysis. The job is service of process and official notices, not ordinary mail or bank address proof.
Use business-address analysis. The question is who accepts the address for the exact purpose.
Do not ask whether TruLease is "good." Ask whether it is accepted for the exact field you are trying to satisfy.
Who is asking for the address?
What type of address do they require?
Do they reject mailboxes or registered agents?
Do they require a lease, utility record, or proof of occupancy?
Does the provider's documentation match the request?
What happens if the account is later reviewed?
Foreign founders often need to separate five things: the U.S. entity, the person behind the business, the real operating location, the mailing address, and the address accepted by a bank or platform.
A U.S. business-address product can help in some cases, but it should not be used to pretend the company operates somewhere it does not operate. If a bank or platform asks for actual operating location, ownership, control, representative identity, shipping, customer support, website, or business activity, answer that field honestly and separately.
Some links on this page are referral links. If you click and later sign up, a referral credit may be earned.
A referral link is not an endorsement of the provider's pricing, fees, policies, uptime, security, suitability, address acceptance, or fit for your use case. These links are service categories to review, not legal, tax, banking, residency, mailbox-provider, registered-agent, or business-formation advice.
Confirm directly with VirtualPostMail, TruLease, and the party requesting the address before relying on any address product.
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