I made an omission there :(
That 17.5% was VAT (value added tax)  ON TOP of an import duty of around 20%, 
if memory serves me right.
Colin Hill
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Augusto de Ornellas Abreu 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, September 20, 2008 5:29 AM
  Subject: Re: [HG] Import duties on instruments coming into the U.S.


  you guys are lucky

  import duties in Brazil is an astouding 60% (SIXTY!)

  luckily customs is pretty lax at airports...


  On Fri, Sep 19, 2008 at 7:05 PM, Colin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

    The opposite way around is expensive.
    When considering a HG from Olympic, I contacted the UK customs office (they 
had no idea what a HG was) and they decided it was a violin for duty purposes 
(they had a list of "known" instruments and try and match others to it and it 
was either that or a "mechanical music" item which really meant a barrel organ 
or music box) and the duty was around 17.5% plus a long series of other charges 
for the paperwork etc which, even with the good exchange rate, made too 
expensive.
    I got mine from Germany and, as we are both in the EU, I didn't have to pay 
anything else.
    Of course, often they can't be bothered to charge.
    I've never paid anything on CDs and DVDs although there is a charge shown 
on the package!
    Colin Hill
    ----- Original Message ----- From: "Greg Lindahl" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
    To: <[email protected]>
    Sent: Friday, September 19, 2008 10:33 PM
    Subject: Re: [HG] Import duties on instruments coming into the U.S. 




      On Fri, Sep 19, 2008 at 02:24:51PM -0700, Connolly, James wrote:


        Perhaps another way of asking is if your U.S. customers ever end up
        paying import duties on what you send them. Any advice would be welcome.


      I've purchased several musical instruments from overseas, and they
      were labeled as such with a $$ value attached, and I've never had to
      pay a duty.

      Big companies generally use a shipping service, which handles paying
      the duty. Our postal service isn't really set up to collect duties
      from the recipient, unlike some other countries. So a commercial
      shipment without a duty payment will be held in limbo until it's paid.
      And they can't afford to do that for small items.

      -- greg








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