Most visitors online was 4107 , on 14 Jan 2023
Yes, it is a real pain. The goods are held for weeks, all kinds of written evidence with respect to the value has to be presented, and even then they might elect to "estimate" the "true vlaue" and charge you accordingly. Actually antiques older than 100 years should benefit of a (small) reduction in duties, but then you have to provide a written experts opinion (by a third person, neither seller nor buyer) confirming the age. Hall marks are not accepted as evididence. As a result, I only once attempted to get that reduction and took along the Barrauds book for showing the year of make related to the serial number. It did not "convince" and I gave up.Is German customs really that bad with packages?
That's really absurd.Yes, it is a real pain. The goods are held for weeks, all kinds of written evidence with respect to the value has to be presented, and even then they might elect to "estimate" the "true vlaue" and charge you accordingly. Actually antiques older than 100 years should benefit of a (small) reduction in duties, but then you have to provide a written experts opinion (by a third person, neither seller nor buyer) confirming the age. Hall marks are not accepted as evididence. As a result, I only once attempted to get that reduction and took along the Barrauds book for showing the year of make related to the serial number. It did not "convince" and I gave up.
Last year I had ordered a booklet from David Penney. It was returned to him by German customs twice with the grounds: rejected because of "defective declaration" (no details provided). After he sent me the customs slip for inspection and taking a very close look, I found out. David had indicated the total weight in gramm, and not in kilogram, as requested, i.e. instead of "0,150" as "150 g". He probably spent more postage for sending it three times, than what the actual price was.
It is so interesting what you said, I was sure that in Poland customs clearance looks terrible. For example, by importing cars from USA, Canada etc. everyone in Poland makes customs clearance in Germany, because German customs officials are not so meticulousYes, it is a real pain. The goods are held for weeks, all kinds of written evidence with respect to the value has to be presented, and even then they might elect to "estimate" the "true vlaue" and charge you accordingly. Actually antiques older than 100 years should benefit of a (small) reduction in duties, but then you have to provide a written experts opinion (by a third person, neither seller nor buyer) confirming the age. Hall marks are not accepted as evididence. As a result, I only once attempted to get that reduction and took along the Barrauds book for showing the year of make related to the serial number. It did not "convince" and I gave up.
Last year I had ordered a booklet from David Penney. It was returned to him by German customs twice with the grounds: rejected because of "defective declaration" (no details provided). After he sent me the customs slip for inspection and taking a very close look, I found out. David had indicated the total weight in gramm, and not in kilogram, as requested, i.e. instead of "0,150" as "150 g". He probably spent more postage for sending it three times, than what the actual price was.
Very few of these parcels get through German customs, especially in Frankfurt. The extra import duties are for all counties not in the EU. All that Bernard said is true, and more. Those who use this NAWCC Board will have bought their watches outside the country they live in and will know about these import duties. If you have, for instance, had a pocket in Germany, and you found it needed repair, if you were to send it to London, they will want import duties, and then you would get import duties when it is returned. I had a long chat with the custom house in Münster about this, I told them the watch had no value as far as VAT rules, they went into another room for about twenty minutes, and then said I owed them €60. ("It came from the UK duties must be paid"). The longest time for a watch from Australia was two months, it got sent back to Australia, and I got it on the second runDo they open up all packages or is this based on the documentation?
This sounds worse than Italy.Very few of these parcels get through German customs, especially in Frankfurt. The extra import duties are for all counties not in the EU. All that Bernard said is true, and more. Those who use this NAWCC Board will have bought their watches outside the country they live in and will know about these import duties. If you have, for instance, had a pocket in Germany, and you found it needed repair, if you were to send it to London, they will want import duties, and then you would get import duties when it is returned. I had a long chat with the custom house in Münster about this, I told them the watch had no value as far as VAT rules, they went into another room for about twenty minutes, and then said I owed them €60. ("It came from the UK duties must be paid"). The longest time for a watch from Australia was two months, it got sent back to Australia, and I got it on the second run![]()
Their in house customs brokers simply forward the custom´s requests for additional documentation to the recipient, so no real difference in the efforts.If you used private couriers like FedEx or UPS their in house customs brokers wouldn't be able to expedite the customs process in countries like Germany
Despite all the adverse comments which are often made concerning French bureaucracy, I have to admit that although still reeling over the duty implications regarding BREXIT, the system of collecting import duty, is painless and often very efficient. As an example I purchased a watch on Sunday from UK ebay seller, I received an email late last night from La Poste, requesting payment of tax. I paid online. Receipt this morning. Delivery scheduled for tomorrow.
John
Interesting idea. But what advantage would that have? The goods still need to be imported to the EU via the customs and resulting custom fees and VAT taxes must be paid.It might be worth looking into having things sent to a package forwarder with warehouses in VAT free states like Guernsey or Jersey.
Really! Who do you think benefits from that? The rest of us suffer!Some watch dealers--notably Italian and Hong Kong ones--will ship 5 figure watches with a declared value of $200 but they're able to purchase separate insurance policies for the true value.
They seem to exploit loopholes like saying a watch is returned for repair, etc.Really! Who do you think benefits from that? The rest of us suffer!
This practice is known by customs and as a result they open more packages to catch the perpetrators . While if caught they get what they deserve, the rest of us suffer delay and hassle with packages that have the true value of contents declared.
John