Fiscal cancel

A 1929 receipt showing a British postage stamp with a fiscal cancel.

In philately a fiscal cancel is a cancellation on a stamp that indicates that the stamp has been used for fiscal (taxation) purposes.[1]

The stamp may either be a revenue stamp, intended purely for fiscal use, or it may be a stamp valid for either postal or fiscal use.

Varieties

Fiscal cancels take a variety of forms:

Examples:

Values

Postage stamps valid for either fiscal or postal purposes are often worth less when fiscally used than when postally used. They are not, however, necessarily more common fiscally used than postally used.

References

  1. Ask Phil philatelic glossary. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  2. From around 1900, United States revenue stamps were required to be mutilated by cutting, after being affixed to documents, and in addition to being cancelled in ink. A class of office equipment was created to achieve this which became known as "stamp mutilators". Revenue Stamp Mutilators. Early Office Museum, 2012. Retrieved 15 June 2012. Archived here.
  3. United States Patent for a "Stamp Mutilator", 1900. No. 653366.