I send only letters from the Main Post Office and only registered ones with a track number. This is a guarantee that the letter will definitely reach you. The staff is friendly, they will explain everything and there is a place where you can fill out the address if you buy an envelope in this building. Anyway, you can write a letter while you have the time and opportunity. The building is large.
It's nice to be here.
A nice place, quiet and sparsely populated. Polite and caring staff. There are small queues, literally several people at a time. The order is monitored by vigilant security, which also helps visitors navigate, well done, everything is organized at a decent level.
The work of public services such as the post office in Uzbekistan exists on the principle of "who understands life, he is in no hurry." Initially, I wanted to send a parcel from Samarkand, but the system hung there for two days and sent it after moving to the neighboring city of Tashkent. The room is large (even too large) and comfortable. There are practically no queues. Different windows for different purposes. The queue is only going to those where the parcels are. But the system hung up again, and with the quick registration and packaging of the parcel itself, I had to wait another 30-40 minutes for the technical support staff, who manually overloaded and reconnected something. The result has been achieved - I was able to send a message from Uzbekistan to the UK (now there are sanctions from Moscow). And it arrived two weeks faster than the postcard that I sent in the same post office to myself in Moscow as a keepsake
A huge Soviet-built post office building. Very nice staff, they told me everything, helped me fill out the paperwork. They also bought water stamps of Uzbekistan there.
Tashkent's main post office is a building with an atmosphere reminiscent of Soviet times (or so it seems to me). Accordingly, the building was built before independence. Despite this, it is very cool inside the building in summer and warm in winter. I often had the opportunity to send letters by mail and used the services of this department. Courteous staff who fulfill their obligations in a timely and high-quality manner.
The post office services are good. But at the expense of parking the car "0" there is no parking. There are signs everywhere. Immediately issue a fine for stopping.
From the point of view of work, everything is standard as everywhere else. There are no big queues. The employees work sluggishly, but they do their job. More interesting from the point of view of history. This is a building of Soviet seismic modernism with an old Soviet interior in a style close to modernism and minimalism.
The main Post Office of Tashkent is a landmark, it is a legend.I have been observing the work of this post office since Soviet times.Yes, your hard times, when you could speak badly about the work and the employees of this post office..But today I can only speak positively about its employees and the quality of service..Respectful and pleasant treatment to customers, they will answer any question competently and clearly.The parcel department works quickly and efficiently...People are happy and always leave satisfied with the service..The building is spacious, clean, and beautiful.
Great
I was making out a phone not so long ago, it was clean, spacious, there were few people, the queue passed quickly, without delay, the staff was polite. I can't say anything about the parcels, well, I think there are no problems sending or receiving them.
Spacious hall, city center. The phone's IMEI can only be registered in this branch. This operation is performed from 9.00, although the department itself is from 8
There is no parking, there is nowhere to park the car, there are only signs around the building that stop is prohibited. There are a lot of currency traders on the street. I do not advise you to come in your own car.
A beautiful building, a large hall, but the service is much better, remnants of all the past than the present! It's worth coming in to see how it was in the union. :)
Kind people are working. We helped to save the phone from being blocked on the last day, right before the new year. They help fill out forms, answer stupid questions (I asked a lot of stupid questions). We also just talked for life, while there were no people
The service is just terrible! Such a big impressive building from the outside, but when you get inside, it's a complete disappointment. The staff is barely moving, everyone is busy with their personal affairs, they don't care about customers. I waited an hour and a half to send a small package around the city of Tashkent!!!! And this is still not enough. Before me, the people who stood there, they generally waited half a day for their parcels to be sent. The service couldn't be worse. One computer for two. While one is sitting at it, that's it, the other is waiting and so are the customers...An hour, two.... It's disgusting, I hope I never have to send anything there again.
And by the way, it is so expensive to send a parcel to Russia. Maybe there are such prices everywhere. But here for 1 kg more than 100,000. and even if 2kg 300g comes out, they round up to three. People were sending in front of me, that's why I found out. In general, I'm not thrilled with our mail. The service is very lame.
It's a pretty quiet place with helpful staff. Everything is strictly on business. No frills. There is quite a lot of bureaucracy for such an institution. Payment is in cash only.
I was there, I registered the phone, a completely stupid and unnecessary procedure, but the staff is friendly, does their job well and quickly, that's why I gave "4" stars.
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Level 7 Local Expert
March 29, 2024
I didn't go to the Main Post Office itself, but... there is an excellent salon and a training center for hairdressers from the end! I recommend it!
The phone's IMEI was registered. Everything went well with us: the specialist worked, spoke Russian, explained everything clearly, politely, and so on. In general, everything went smoothly, and we kept up with the queue and filling out paperwork in half an hour. It would be nice to do all this online, but I think this is not a question for the main post office. There are no complaints.
The atmosphere is pure Soviet Union, of course, already nostalgic))
To register an IMEI, I liked to contact the very first windows of UZTEL – a high level of service, speed and friendliness. Everything you expect from a customer-oriented company.
The service certainly wants the best, they call and say come and convince you that they work without lunch, you leave work to quickly pick up the parcel and it turns out there is lunch))))
There is clearly not enough staff, but they were served quickly. My lost mail was found and given out. And the girl who found my parcel for me clearly had a lunch break, but she still served me to the end. There would be more such specialists.
The people work well, but the mail system itself just sucks. The worst in the post-Soviet space! Literally only this year, when sending parcels, you can be provided with a box, tape, various packaging materials, a marker, a pen, etc. It became possible to fill out a declaration online, then just come with a printed one and a receipt for the parcel. Of course, everything is still very raw, but at least they have started to change something. The mail has been going on for a very long time. Of course, they are trying to change something, but somehow it doesn't work out. They can't bring it to mind properly. I think they're just stealing everything upstairs!
Too much at all, to send one parcel to Russia for 5 kg, fifty dollars is almost awesome 😱, it's easier to send gifts with money 😊 in short, I do not advise a specific rip-off
Queues, in the worst traditions of the Soviet era. However, there were holidays and most of the windows just didn't work. The purpose of the visit was to register the imei to the phone for about 60,000 rubles.
I bought stamps at the post office. There was no queue, I immediately went to an empty window. A very friendly girl explained to me how much stamps are needed to send a postcard to Russia.
The old Soviet building, the inside is the same, unchanged.
All the processes of working with the client have not changed. Everything is long enough, and most importantly, you can often hear "come tomorrow".
It is impossible to enjoy visiting this place.
The impression is average. The queue for IMEI registration is very large, the system is not debugged, it was not possible to register on the first day because the system was hanging. Of the advantages, a very nice girl served.
I used to work around the clock, but now I don't, I wanted to send letters several times after work in the evening, but the mail didn't work. I didn't have the opportunity during the day, because my work is irregular.
Forty years ago, I had to visit this place, nothing has changed except the glass curtain from the post office workers.The personal is not friendly, unlike other places in Tashkent, and the hall is semi-dark, as it was 40 years ago(((
The parcel department is without complaints. The IMEI is constantly being queued... Why is it needed at all...They came up with a way to make money out of thin air, and the people only have extra hemorrhoids...
You can register an Imei. From the entrance to the right. There are only four windows where they accept. 2 are closer to the entrance and 2 are away. About those that are far away, everyone forgets
It is very convenient, you can send a letter and a parcel. As well as another convenience, both citizens and foreigners can register IMEI codes of mobile phones.