on 26-11-2015 09:20 AM
Does anybody know how customs duties are applied in the UK?
The reason I ask is because I made a sale to the UK which was valued at $36.00 (£17.20).
I believe that the threshold is £15.00, so the total was just a little bit over.
The buyer left positive feedback, but mentioned that she had to pay about £12.00 in taxes, which is about 2/3 of the value of the items!
Why do they land up paying so much?
on 26-11-2015 09:28 AM
Have a read here https://www.gov.uk/goods-sent-from-abroad/overview
on 26-11-2015 09:30 AM
UK has VAT on imports over GBP15 (including postage). The rate is 20%, or is it 22%? Plus the tax is processed by Royal Mail and there is a further GBP8 fee for the processing. So if the total purchase was 17.2, the tax will be 3.44 or 3.79, plus 8 = 11.44 or 11.79GBP. Accounting for exchange rate fluctuations, that sounds aout right. Those fees are not the seller's responsibility, the buyer is liable for them.
26-11-2015 09:30 AM - edited 26-11-2015 09:31 AM
They have to pay it to post office in order to pick item up and they also have to pay a post office handling fee, so not all that charge is customs. I think handling fee is a flat fee so it makes cheaper items seem disproportionaly expense.
Also if you do get negged over it you can get it removed
on 26-11-2015 10:36 AM
Wow, that's a pretty high rate.
You would think that they would pay 20% on the amount OVER the £15.00 threshold, ie £2.20 x 20%, not £17.20 x 20%.
The $8.00 processing is a killer.
Fortunately they left good feedback, so I'm ok in that respect.
I do say on my listings that buyers are responsible for all taxes etc, etc, but I think that folk in the UK don't actually realise how low their threshold is compared to other countries like Aus and the USA. I know that Canada has a low threshold too - CAD$25.00.
on 26-11-2015 11:07 PM
It's the same here.
The threshold is, currently, $1000, but if it's over you pay on the full amount, not the over $1000 bit.