Where does your mail go when you move? The simple truth most people miss.
Moving in the Greater Toronto Area (Milton, Mississauga, Burlington, Oakville, Georgetown)? Don’t wait to find out your mortgage statement or a government letter got lost in transit. Here’s a clear, practical playbook on what actually happens to your mail after a move — and exactly what to do so nothing slips through the cracks.
What happens to mail after you file a change of address
- Canada Post forwards eligible mail to your new address once you register a change of address. This is the backbone of how mail follows you.
- Not everything is forwarded. Couriers (UPS, FedEx), packages requiring a signature, some government documents, and subscription goodies can behave differently.
- Forwarding is a temporary safety net, not a permanent fix. Use it to buy time while you update your accounts.
Step-by-step checklist for a secure mail transition (GTA-focused)
- Register with Canada Post mail forwarding immediately — do it online the day you confirm your move. This reduces risk for Milton, Mississauga and Oakville addresses when volume spikes.
- Notify high-priority senders directly: bank, credit cards, employer, CRA, provincial ID (ServiceOntario), insurance, utility companies in Burlington and Georgetown. Don’t assume forwarding covers legal or financial notices.
- Update subscriptions and recurring services (streaming, newspapers, prescriptions). Small subscriptions often cause long-term headaches.
- Track courier deliveries: give new delivery instructions to UPS/FedEx; they don’t honor Canada Post forwarding.
- Secure your old mailbox or end service to reduce theft risk. Ask your landlord or property manager to hold or secure mail.
Common pitfalls and how to avoid them
- Assuming everything forwards: many time-sensitive or legal notices won’t. Action: send change-of-address forms to government and financial institutions directly.
- Waiting too long: register forwarding and notify top five senders before packing day.
- Ignoring packages and couriers: give delivery notes to carriers or schedule pickup at their hubs.

How long will forwarding protect you? What to expect
Canada Post’s forwarding is a temporary service. Use it to catch missed senders and update accounts. If you see repeat mail to your old address after registering, chase the sender directly — it usually means they never updated their records.
Final move tip for GTA homeowners
Make a short master list: banks, CRA, insurance, mortgage lender, utilities, employer, driver’s license, health card. Update these first. That one list cuts weeks of headaches.
If you’re moving in Milton, Mississauga, Burlington, Oakville or Georgetown and want a local checklist or trusted mover and courier referrals, I provide a tailored moving packet to every client. Email me for a free copy and local help.
Contact: Tony Sousa — tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca
Clear actions. Less stress. Move smart in the GTA.



















