Hi Adam,

you can check the "gift" option, but he will have to pay anyway. This is my expercience with German customs :-)

Next time, make sure that the buyer agrees to these terms prior to purchase:
1) You will NOT mark it as a gift (most common question, believe me)
2) You will NOT lie on the value

This truly saves you a lot of time. Any by the way, stating it to be a gift even though it is not is not a very good idea, if they find out, you are in trouble.

Best regards,
Jens


Hi everyone,
This is completely off-topic, but I know that there are many members here who do a lot of shipping of product overseas and I'd like your opinion. I usually don't sell anything to anyone overseas (it's a hassle), but recently I made an exception. After the sale was made, the buyer is now asking me to note it as a "gift" on the customs forms so that he does not have to pay import taxes. Is this standard? My first thought is, "Forget it!" and just note down the actual value he paid. However, I seem to recall that just about anything I've ever purchased from overseas sellers always seems to have it marked as a gift on the customs forms. So, the question: Is this standard practice?

-Adam


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