People in Lower Earley have raised complaints that Royal Mail is delivering too much junk mail to their houses instead of “actual post.”

In a recent status to social media, Henry Thompson aired his grievances at being sent dozens of leaflets rather than his mail delivery.

He said: “Just wanted to say thank you to the Post Office, or Rotten Mail, or whatever they call themselves these days for the delivery today,

“The unsolicited leaflets outnumbered the actual mail items by about 10 to 1, I’ll be looking forward to seeing the next delivery in a fortnights time, if it’s anything like last February we’ll probably get a couple of Christmas cards.”

Many took to the comment section to echo Mr Thompsons’ annoyance at Royal Mail.

One person said “I do wonder how much the Royal Mail gets paid to deliver junk mail? It must be worth their while weighing down the delivery sacks which will just be recycled (into more junk mail) as soon as it drops on the mat.

“How much proper post is in a delivery sack these days?”

Many agreed that their post is more often than not delivered infrequently, and that they are often delivered a copious amount of junk mail.

Mr Thompson continued: “These all arrived in the same delivery, along with 2 or 4 items of actual mail.

“I’d like to see how Royal Mail responds to such lunacy especially given we maybe only get one delivery a week sometimes.

“Stuff such as the competition magazine my partner subscribes to are out of date by that point, our postal service has been like this for over a year now and all we see are stock responses.”

A spokesperson for Royal Mail has sent the following statement:

“In terms of deliveries, I would say not every home has mail to be delivered every day.

“We deliver the items that come into the delivery office as soon as possible with the majority (of 1c mail) arriving the following day and 96 per cent within three days of posting.

“The vast majority of letters we deliver are done so successfully and on time, with our latest published data showing three-quarters of first-class mail arriving the following day, and 96 per cent within three days of posting.

“We strongly encourage any customer who experiences a substantial delay to their post to contact our customer services team directly so we can investigate.”