What do I need to declare at customs?
Hi,
I am not a 100% sure if this is the right forum. I was wondering do you have to declare at customs when re-entering the United States everything you bought? I know you don't have to pay taxes on anything you buy under $300, if you don't go over the $300 can you ususally not declare anything? Lastly, what if you buy something over $300 and are chaged VAT/Taxes in the country you are in. Do you have to pay double taxes when you declare the item? |
http://www.customs.gov/xp/cgov/travel/vacation/kbyg/ may have some useful information for US residents.
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Customs declarations is such a general topic that it's not really germane to this forum. Please continue the discussion in TravelBuzz!
essxjay Travel Safety/Security moderator |
Originally Posted by wifi-jedi
Hi,
I am not a 100% sure if this is the right forum. I was wondering do you have to declare at customs when re-entering the United States everything you bought? I know you don't have to pay taxes on anything you buy under $300, if you don't go over the $300 can you ususally not declare anything? Lastly, what if you buy something over $300 and are chaged VAT/Taxes in the country you are in. Do you have to pay double taxes when you declare the item? Second, your limits are out of date. The current limits are $200, $800, $1600, depending on where you are going, how long you are away, and when you last used the exemption. Read the "Know before you go" pamphlet on the customs website to which tjl kindly provided the link. Third, if you read the form which you must submit when going through customs, you will see that you must declare all items which you have acquired abroad, either as a purchase or a gift, regardless of the total value. To do this, I usually aggregate it in categories and round the numbers such as: Clothes - 50$ Chocolate - $75 (my wife loves chocolate :D ) Printed matter - $25 Souvenirs -25$ Jewelry - $200 1 liter alcohol - $25 200 cigarettes - $15 etc. You should itemize volume on alcohol, tobacco, and perfumes, as there are volume limitations on those. Finally, the taxes that you pay on an item when you purchase it, whether through VAT or any other form of tax are irrelevant to whether you pay duty on it. The US doesn't care whether you paid taxes on it or not in the country where you purchased it. That said, many countries will provide a rebate of VAT on larger purchases, so it is worth finding out how to do that in the particular country you are planning to travel to before you go. Also, for valuation purposes, you may be able to deduct the VAT from the value of the item. Please note that gifts are not valued at zero, but at their retail value, so if someone gives you a $10000 fur coat, you have to declare the $10000, even though you didn't pay anything for it. Note that even if you exceed the limit, some items are duty free by their nature. Read the pamphlet and the additional information on the website for more details on this and the duty you may have to pay for exceeding the limit. |
You must declare ALL items purchased on the blue customs form. If you bought less than $400, I believe, you can walk through the green line.
There are exceptions which would require you to walk through the red line. These include buying more than $400, carrying more than $10,000, carrying illegal drugs, weapons, etc. |
Originally Posted by seat 50J
You must declare ALL items purchased on the blue customs form. If you bought less than $400, I believe, you can walk through the green line.
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I've always included all of my wine on a single line. They're more than welcome to ask me how much wine is $500 worth...but they never have.
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Originally Posted by You want to go where?
Third, if you read the form which you must submit when going through customs, you will see that you must declare all items which you have acquired abroad, either as a purchase or a gift, regardless of the total value. To do this, I usually aggregate it in categories and round the numbers
Pen: $2.50 Pen: $1.25 Pack of gum: $0.75 Magazine: $5.25 Hotel shampoo bottle: $0.00 and on and on... Of course you'd have to have a good memory and ask for the form early in the flight. |
I know this may seem a little obvious and trivial, but, if for nothing else than completeness' sake, I wanted to add that you're only required to declare those items purchased abroad that you are bringing back with you into the United States.
Originally Posted by ralfp
One day it might be fun to waste an entire flight fully itemizing the list of all items that you are bringing back.
Pen: $2.50 Pen: $1.25 ... |
Originally Posted by ralfp
Hotel shampoo bottle: $0.00
Sounds like a joke, but I often had commercial shipments held up because alongside large quantities of high value goods, my supplier had added some free brochures. They had to be re-declared at a value - albeit nominal. Notice that what you paid for something is not necessarily the same as its value for customs purposes. (Though one is often good evidence of the other.) Customs can even add the value of the shipping before arriving at the value of something for VAT/duty purposes. You can generally deduct recoverable foreign sales taxes from the value (whether or not you actually recover them). In practice, nobody really worries about these minor details for non-commercial shipments and if you're below your limits then you're OK. US customs rules are probably different, but EU rules should be aligned. |
Am I the only one here that removes the tags and claims they are not new? Obviously for some things it can't be done wine etc. But for most other things it is possible. :D
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Originally Posted by bensyd
Am I the only one here that removes the tags and claims they are not new? Obviously for some things it can't be done wine etc. But for most other things it is possible. :D
I brought several thousand dollars worth of home appliances for personal use through U.S. Customs, declared them and was not charged any duty. Just because you go over the "limits" doesn't mean you will have exhorbitant or fees or any at all. |
well,
Originally Posted by ralfp
One day it might be fun to waste an entire flight fully itemizing the list of all items that you are bringing back.
Pen: $2.50 Pen: $1.25 Pack of gum: $0.75 Magazine: $5.25 Hotel shampoo bottle: $0.00 and on and on... Of course you'd have to have a good memory and ask for the form early in the flight. |
Originally Posted by aamilesslave
I've always included all of my wine on a single line. They're more than welcome to ask me how much wine is $500 worth...but they never have.
Thanks |
Originally Posted by iapetus
I sorta do this. I don't actually itemize every single item I purchase, but I do explicitly list things such as film and contact solution on these forms, figuring that it'll make customs agents less suspicious if they see me getting into specifics like this.
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Originally Posted by bensyd
Am I the only one here that removes the tags and claims they are not new? Obviously for some things it can't be done wine etc. But for most other things it is possible. :D
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Originally Posted by letiole
A friend of mine did this and got caught (she was wearing jewelry she had just purchased in Hong Kong, but that she didn't declare). Now not only was she paying on the things she did buy, but customs decided most everything she had with her - including the stuff she brought from home - was newly purchased abroad and subject to duty and fines.
I brought several thousand dollars worth of home appliances for personal use through U.S. Customs, declared them and was not charged any duty. Just because you go over the "limits" doesn't mean you will have exhorbitant or fees or any at all. |
Originally Posted by bensyd
How did they know it was new??? I guess I don't usually come back dripping in gold :D but I have often come back well over my duty free allowance.
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Originally Posted by bensyd
How did they know it was new??? I guess I don't usually come back dripping in gold :D but I have often come back well over my duty free allowance.
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I've actually had the opposite happen! I was on BA flying SVQ-LHR-JFK, with the latter segment on Concorde (this was just before it stopped flying), and I was headed home because my mother was on her deathbed. At Customs at JFK, the agent, in a stern voice, asked me if I had anything to declare. I told him that I did not, and that I had to cut this trip short because I had to go to the hospital to see my mom and he felt the need not only to tell me that "It is better to tell me now about your purchases before I find them on my own" and then proceeded to go through my luggage piece by piece.
There was NOTHING as I hadn't made any purchases and yet he felt the need to keep me there, looking at everything, seemingly to prove a point. Nothing like this has happend since, and I am not sure what "trigger" besides flying on Concorde (and I don't even know that he specifically knew this) caused him to have such an attitude, or whether it was just a bad day for him! On a side note, just last week when returning from London the agent didn't like the lack of itemization on my form (I simply listed $600 for clothing) and asked me to itemize it on the form! |
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