Holiday Shipping Info (2023 edition)
So far this season, deliveries have been reliably on-time, which is a good sign. But holiday shipping situations can deteriorate with little warning (never forget Shipageddon 2020!), so our best advice is please don't wait until the last minute!
Standard Shipping option
General info and timing: Our standard class of domestic shipping is USPS First Class, and it costs $5 for one pair of gloves and is FREE for orders of $49+. Our warehouse is currently shipping nearly all packages in 0-2 business days. USPS is then delivering the vast majority of those First Class packages in 2-4 business days (but a handful have been taking up to a week). So right now, the chances are extremely good that your package will arrive in under a week, especially if it's headed to the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic or Midwest regions.
Need it before Christmas?
- Order by Sunday 12/17 and select the standard USPS shipping option (which includes free shipping for orders of $49+). If necessary, our warehouse will automatically adjust shipping speed to make sure the package gets delivered before Christmas.
- After 12/17, you should use the expedited shipping option to ensure delivery before Christmas (details below).
Expedited Shipping option
A faster shippIng option will be available for a few weeks during the holidays (11/30 through 12/20 at 7am ET): FedEx Overnight. It costs a flat rate of $19 per order (i.e. it's the same $19 charge regardless of order size). In our experience, the timing for this class of shipping can occasionally slip to the second business day during wintertime, which is why we indicate a delivery window of 1-2 business days. And please remember that this is 1-2 business days from when the order ships, not from when the order is placed. Our warehouse usually cannot process and ship out the order same-day.
For more shipping details, please see our Freezy Freakies Shipping Info Page
Time's a-wastin'! Go get the raddest gloves ever now, because trust us they look a whole lot better on your hands than they do at the bottom of a towering pile of packages.