Declaring Alcohol US Customs
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: Dec 2014
Posts: 1
Declaring Alcohol US Customs
Hi,
Sorry if this is in the wrong place! I wasn't sure..
I am a 20 year old that has been studying abroad in England. I purchased an expensive bottle of whiskey as a christmas gift and am wondering the best way to get it through customs as I am technically underage in the United States. Do I declare it and then explain it is a gift? Or do I just not declare it?
Also I recently saw about the automated passport control machines where you scan your passport and fill out the declaration form there... If I scan my passport and then tell the machine I have whiskey do you think a red flag will go off and that it will alert them I am underage?
Please help, I am leaving in two days! (Flying from Heathrow to Dulles Intl if it matters)
Sorry if this is in the wrong place! I wasn't sure..
I am a 20 year old that has been studying abroad in England. I purchased an expensive bottle of whiskey as a christmas gift and am wondering the best way to get it through customs as I am technically underage in the United States. Do I declare it and then explain it is a gift? Or do I just not declare it?
Also I recently saw about the automated passport control machines where you scan your passport and fill out the declaration form there... If I scan my passport and then tell the machine I have whiskey do you think a red flag will go off and that it will alert them I am underage?
Please help, I am leaving in two days! (Flying from Heathrow to Dulles Intl if it matters)
#2




Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: YUL
Posts: 1,034
https://help.cbp.gov/app/answers/det...3D/suggested/1
You must declare it, and they will confiscate it as you are underage. My advice it to either mail it or leave it at home.
If you do not declare it and they find it you will be in a pile of trouble.
You must declare it, and they will confiscate it as you are underage. My advice it to either mail it or leave it at home.
If you do not declare it and they find it you will be in a pile of trouble.
#3




Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: on the path to perdition
Programs: Delta, United
Posts: 5,017
You are pretty much screwed trying to fly with it as it must be declared and you are under age.
You can not send it by Royal Post as it greater than 24% ABV:
http://www.royalmail.com/personal/he...Goods-overseas
So your best bet is to leave it in England and have a colleague bring it over.
You can not send it by Royal Post as it greater than 24% ABV:
http://www.royalmail.com/personal/he...Goods-overseas
So your best bet is to leave it in England and have a colleague bring it over.
#4
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: California
Posts: 2,731
#5
Join Date: Feb 2014
Location: PHX
Programs: AA Aluminum, WN B+
Posts: 929
Would the OP be able to FedEx it? I may have missed something, but a quick glance at their terms and I didn't see anything other than the recipient must be of legal age and sign for the package.
#6
FlyerTalk Evangelist



Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: ORD
Posts: 14,773
From http://www.fedex.com/us/developer/pr...hipping-2.html
FedEx accepts shipments of alcohol (beer, wine, and spirits) within the U.S. and for both U.S. import and export when the shipper and the recipient are licensed to import and/or export alcohol.
#7




Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: New York, NY
Programs: DL Gold. UA Silver, Marriott Gold, Hilton Diamond, Hyatt (Lifetime Diamond downgraded to Explorist)
Posts: 6,777
The cost of shipping may be prohibitive. Are you traveling with someone that is of US legal age?
If not..have a fun last 2 nights and enjoy it yourself.
If not..have a fun last 2 nights and enjoy it yourself.
#8




Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: anywhere and everywhere
Programs: United Nations 193, UA GS, AS MVP 100K, DL Diamond, Marriot Lifetime Titanium, AmEx Centurion
Posts: 6,362
#9
FlyerTalk Evangelist




Join Date: Mar 2013
Programs: DL PM, MR Titanium/LTP, Hilton Diamond
Posts: 10,319
#10
FlyerTalk Evangelist




Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: London & Sonoma CA
Programs: UA Plat, MM *G for life, AY Plat, BA Silver
Posts: 10,553
Shipping alcohol to the USA is very difficult so that's not a real option. As to the passport machine, who knows if it's programmed to pick up on this. When I take a bottle in, I simply declare it as a gift on the blue form and give its value, not saying it's alcohol as the form doesn't ask. Nobody has ever questioned me - but then I'm not doing anything wrong.
#11
FlyerTalk Evangelist


Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: RSW
Programs: HHonors - Diamond; IHG - Diamond; Marriott Bonvoy - Platinum
Posts: 14,289
If you hit a crabby, by-the-book inspector, you'd be willing to pay many times what the bottle cost to have a "do over" -- leave it behind!
#13
Suspended
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Canada, USA, Europe
Programs: UA 1K
Posts: 31,439
No one is 'definitely going to find it'. If you have the whisky in your checked luggage you may sail through without any inspection. As a returning US citizen I would imagine your chance of an inspection is about 20%. Depending on your tolerance for risk, this is what I would do ("it's a birthday present for my dad.")
#14

Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Austin, TX, USA
Posts: 284
Just pack it or bury it in your luggage. Don't declare it. You'll likely sail right through customs. If they do inspect, play dumb - but they will likely take it. You have a low chance of inspection, so if you are okay with that risk just bring it in.
Otherwise find a friend returning and have them ship it when back in the states.
Otherwise find a friend returning and have them ship it when back in the states.
#15




Join Date: May 2010
Programs: Delta Kryptonium
Posts: 1,144
Here is something to consider - if, in the future, you ever might want to get Global Entry and you don't declare the whiskey, and they find it, you will be banned for life from getting GE (which also gets you a trusted traveler #, which also gets you almost 100% domestic pre-check on any airline). In other words, I don't think it's worth it - find someone over 21 to carry it in for you in their luggage, even if it's another student over 21 going to a different U.S. airport you could pay them to send it to you by express mail. Global Entry (GE) is a very valuable benefit that you may really want in the future.

