on 11-05-2016 05:14 PM
hi I am from Australia and was looking to buy something thing from the USA. the item im looking at costs just a lil over 1000 AUD. ive read that import charges are between 0-10% usually 5% for items over 1000, but on the page of the thing i want to buy, the import charges says "$271.61 (amount confirmed at checkout) ". is this a correct estimation of export charges i will have to pay?
if anyone has any experience with this please let me know.
Solved! Go to Solution.
on 23-09-2018 01:14 AM
on 23-09-2018 10:43 AM
But if the seller is using the GPS the GST is collected by Pitney Bowes and they charge a fee for collecting it and GST is also payable on the collection fee.....so the total is for Import Charges (including GST), the same as the charges for items over $1000.
on 23-09-2018 10:58 AM
@loosepocket wrote:
@k1000-sir-sales
Then it should be listed as GST payable, not Import Fees. It's confusing and inaccurate.
Anything under $1000.00AUD while being charged GST, is not charged Import Fees or Taxes.
eBay needs to change the coding of their sites to recognise purchases entering Australian addresses, under $1000.00AUD need to show the GST cost, and purchases =>$1000.00AUD need to show Import Fees/Taxes* (*which also incorporates the GST).
Pretty simple change and it would resolve all the issues regarding the confusion of the current situation.
I wanted to buy something from a seller in the US and I'm in Australia. All up the cost to me in AUD was to be around $112.05 for the item and postage.
These are the actual figures in USD as shown if purchased:
Item (1) US $59.95 ($82.25 AUD approx.)
Postage US $21.72 ($29.80 AUD approx.)
Import charges US $12.75 ($0.00 AUD)
Order total US $94.42 ($112.05 AUD approx.)
GST on this purchase is a total of $12.05 AUD ($8.17 USD, not $12.75 USD)
If we are to accept the import fees area listed in the sale is meant to be GST due on the item, then it is clearly being overcharged, as well as being mislabeled.
It's simply not good enough.
as stated by lyndal, when the GSP is the shipping method then Pitney Bowes collects the GST as the freight forwarder.
The reason for this is that the eBay collection of GST is based on the item being sent to an Australian address. When the GSP is involved for USA items the item is sent to a USA address, meaning that it is PB that is addressing the item to an Aussie address.
While it is illegal for Australian businesses to charge for collecting GST, the same does not apply for overseas businesses. The import charge that PB charges includes the GST component for the item+postage, a ‘fee’ for collecting GST and processing documentation, and most frustrating of all (for me) they have to charge GST on their ‘fee’ for charging GST/documentation.
on 05-05-2020 09:02 AM
on 05-05-2020 02:24 PM
Wrong....the GST is being collected on the item and shipping cost to remit to the ATO.
The company that collects that amount is providing a service and therefore is liable to pay GST on that transaction too.
So no double dipping.
on 31-05-2020 05:45 AM
Irrespective of the differing opnions here, the elephant in the room is the verifiable illegitimacy of the legal entity commonly known as "Australian Government".
All roads lead to Rome!
on 31-05-2020 05:23 PM
?????????? Please explain?
31-05-2020 08:46 PM - edited 31-05-2020 08:47 PM
Obviously because the legally elected government legislated to charge GST on all imports, that make them illegitimate.
I don't like them and I will express my dissatisfaction in 2022, but that doesn't make the last election illegal, just immoral.
on 04-11-2020 06:16 PM
on 04-11-2020 06:28 PM
@phatlipbean wrote:
I don’t understand why it’s separate from the postage, or why we’d pay that tax at all for something under $1000
It's been in force for nearly 2 1/2 tears.