Any Cross Border Shipping Advice?
xris
Registered Users Posts: 546 Major grins
I'm about to do my first deal here and I'm wondering if anyone would care to offer comments or advice regarding cross border shipping - US/Canada? Who's best, USPS, UPS, FedEx? Are there any taxes, duties or special charges involved? Good/bad experiences?
I'd love to hear from any other Canucks who have done the deed and lived to tell about it!! :barb
I'd love to hear from any other Canucks who have done the deed and lived to tell about it!! :barb
X www.thepicturetaker.ca
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I've bought quite a bit of used equipment from dgrin, and had it shipped via all the usual suspects(sellers choice). They all work fine.
They will all add brokerage fees and gst - no way around it, typically about 10% of insured value (6% gst, 4% brokerage). You can prepay it on some shipping services. I have not recieved things faster from the courier services than from USPS, and to date have not had any bad experiences. USPS ground has been as reliable and fast as any.
New goods (photo gifts for example) have arrived with the brokerage fees taken care of, as one would expect.
Good Luck - it is a great time for us canucks to cross border shop, especially since the local retailers are not responding to the currency change.
ann
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Thanks Ann. All good info. And nice to know.
It's a bit of a bad habit, actually......
(70 - 200 mm f2.8L, 135f2.0, 50mmf1.4, 580EX, 1dMkIIN, 24 - 105 L)
Must show restraint now - no way will I bite at the next 1.4X TC , nope, no way!!!!!
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DeNic Photography | Portfolio | Group Blog
Canon 50D | 50 1.8 | 17-50 2.8 | 70-200 4L
There's a HUGE backlog at customs. Like, massive. Expect a couple weeks wait now, I gather its even worse than it was this fall. Also, double check the duty you'll get charged by CBSA. MOST photographic equipment is duty free, but you'll always get hit with GST. Sadness.
If you get charged extra (likely, they'll just label it Misc Photo Equip, which is 5% duty), just fill the appeal copy of the import form and find out what the proper catagory is. Here's the main site - http://www.cbsa-asfc.gc.ca. You'll have to dig for the pdf's (and dig deep, it took me quite a while - sorry, no direct link).
photoprice.ca also has a good article on this... http://www.photoprice.ca/article/00001
Their price comparison page also demonstrates how badly us Canadians are/were getting hosed (but that is changing now!).
Word of warning - stay away from UPS. I hate them, more than the GST. Its always been a bad experience wit them. FedEx is somewhat better, but if you can afford the wait, mail is probably the best. Also, Can Post will only hit you $8 for customs fees whereas the couriers is anywhere from $16-40 (or more).
eBay stuff across the border is pretty much the same story, but there are no good deals there on lenses - that's why I lurk here a lot!
Any other questions - just email me. I've still not got my appeal back from CBSA, but I'm not expecting it for a while. I met a guy who used to work there and, well, they were busy last year and with the exchange now, its completely bananas.
e
This is a first for me all-round. First PayPal purchase, first cross-border on-line purchase. So I'll compare and let you know. But I get the feeling I'll not do cross-border purchases lightly in the future.
Chris
AFAIK, you'll always get hit with GST on declared value. And the $8 brokers fee (if post, courier sometimes much more).
Sometimes, you can get away with stuff if its declared a gift (under something like $50), but I did get hit once for duty on an engineering sample of electronic components (which was free) and the UPS brokerage fee so that really started my anger with them.
Lightly? Well, you shouldn't really do any sales online lightly.
It's a modern world, don't be country-centric is all I'm saying. Of course, do your homework and be prepared to wait a little longer due to distance, but don't rule out potential markets just because you have to write 5 words and sign a customs form.
moderator of: The Flea Market [ guidelines ]
Again, not all borders are the same. If you are buying from a merchant (ie B&H), there would be a customs fee. Peer-peer purchases (such as those on dgrin) are not considered taxable, again, at least here in Aus, as they are coming from a private party, not a business.
*Fellas: this thread title is very broad, so I'm not harshing your Canuck party, but I feel this is valuable info for other dgrinners considering worldwide exchanges, let's keep adding good info here.
moderator of: The Flea Market [ guidelines ]
They said it would be 6-10 days.
Hope that is it, if so it was rather easy. I was told that if the value of the item was more than $40 or the box weighed more than 4lbs then I would have a whole different stack of papers to fill out.
DeNic Photography | Portfolio | Group Blog
Canon 50D | 50 1.8 | 17-50 2.8 | 70-200 4L
thanks
moderator of: The Flea Market [ guidelines ]
Certainly...sorry...
I sent one sub-4lb box to Toronto, Canada via USPS (United States Postal Service). In all actuality it was very easy and straight forward. One form to fill out.
I was told that had the item been heavier than 4lbs or worth more than $50 I would have had to fill out a few more lengthy forms.
I have been using USPS to ship everything for about 5 years now. UPS lost/broken more packages in a 2 year span (12) that USPS has in over 5 years (3) for me with my business.
DeNic Photography | Portfolio | Group Blog
Canon 50D | 50 1.8 | 17-50 2.8 | 70-200 4L
It's not those trivial things that bother me, though. The problem is actually on several levels. I'm just across the border, yet I'm told WEEKS can be added to shipping, not to mention rather heavy-sounding brokerage fees AND potential taxes and administrive time. I may even have to go to the post office to pick up the package.
I guess the proof will be in the pudding, as they say. But if this is all correct, it greatly decreases the value of such transactions.
What's worse is that my potential customers on SM have to deal with the same problems.
As an aside -- and from still very limited experience thus far -- they also have VERY long wait times receiving prints and are turned off by being forced to use credit cards cross-border (where there have been far more security problems) instead of PayPal.
I'm certainly no expert. That's why I'm trying to test the waters as throughly as possible. But so far, the potential looks great while the practice is proving problematic.
Ever since we moved to Oz a few months ago, we've gotten (and sent) quite a few packages, including a lens from dgrin. Besides one minor hiccup that was simply a USPS routing error causing the package to make a round trip of the US before leaving, everything has come in less than 2 weeks.
Again, I think the big distinction is packages that are labeled or clearly marked as business transactions. So for your photo/SmugMug business, there may be some ramifications. But, I just want to make it clear for the peer-peer flea market community, that the "trades" done here are not (to my knowledge, don't take me legally on that) bound by any taxation or duty.
moderator of: The Flea Market [ guidelines ]
Hi Eric
It is a Canada US thing.
Incoming goods to Canada, new or used, are subject to Canadian Goods and Services tax - always.
There is also always a brokerage fee by the carrier to 'ease' the parcel through Canada Customs - new, used, business material. USPS fees are the least.
In theory, gifts may be the exception, but labelling insured camera equipment as a gift hasn't worked for me!
As well, right now because the Cdn$ is so strong against others, many more of us are shopping on line and so the lean customs offices are overloaded. My fotofloat package sat in Canada Customs for 10 days.
As well, Canada Post (the carrier that takes over for USPS) is also whining about being too overloaded and so deliveries are delayed by them as well. (fotofoat - another 4 days to get delivered after customs).
Previously, I've recieved ground shipped parcels in a week, paid my fees and drooled over my new equipment.
I really want to order holiday cards through smugmug but I know they will not be here before mid to late December.
I have never taken advantage of smugmug printing because of exchange etc. I sell very few prints from my site, and typically do print fulfilment through a local print house.
Sigh - free trade agreement
ann
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Very cool info Ann. Thanks for clarifying the situation. I was beginning to feel like the 'odd man out' here.
Just a quick mention that the Blurb books I ordered last Sunday (Nov 18) arrived this afternoon (Nov 23) UPS ground!!! No taxes! No brokerage fees! And I'm in Southern Ontario Canada!
clap
I picked up my fotofloats today and there was gst owing. Now, I can go about claiming that back (and should, since it was $35). UPS does cover looking after waiving gst in their fee for service.
It is so complicated!
ann
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For those interested in Canada/US cross border shipping my latest experience is posted here:
http://www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?p=691774#post691774
Just a thought?
Glass: >Sigma 17-35mm,f2.8-4 DG >Tamron 28-75mm,f2.8 >Canon 100mm 2.8 Macro >Canon 70-200mm,f2.8L IS >Canon 200mm,f2.8L
Flash: >550EX >Sigma EF-500 DG Super >studio strobes
Sites: Jim Mitte Photography - Livingston Sports Photos - Brighton Football Photos
Illegal, but yes.
USPS so far has been my best friend. I've brought up over 2k$ since the US dollar has been good, and NOT one problem.
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[Bodies] Canon EOS 20D - Canon EOS 500
[Lenses] Sigma APO 70-200 f/2.8 - Canon EF 85mm f/1.8 - Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 - Tamron XR Di 28-75mm f/2.8 - Canon EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6
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Just to be clear, this thread is all about proper ways of shipping items across the border. Many folks think its black magic, our point here is to help those folks. There are simple customs forms to fill out, and in some cases, duties to pay, so Scott, I certainly hope that in saying:
you are simply saying that of all couriers, USPS has been easiest for you in terms of delivering properly taxed packages. Right?
moderator of: The Flea Market [ guidelines ]
Right - and so as a Canadian travelling, you will be entitled to a certain $ value of 'duty free' goods, that increases the longer you are out of country. Above your limit, you then pay applicable duty. If you do not travel to make your purchase, then applicable duty applies to the whole amount.
In many cases, even after paying the appropriate duty, the price of goods from the US is much better than the same good in Canada, now that the $s are about par. A co worker of mine is saving close to $4K by driving from Edmonton to Spokane to buy a washer and drier - this after she pays for gas and applicable duty and gst! Canadian retailers are screaming at Canadians to shop at home, but... if you were to really think about the difference in pricing, it cannot be accounted for by exchange and duty, and in reality we Canadians pay a premium for being Canadian.
More cross border shopping will put economic pressure on the distribution chain to bring the prices into line.
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Thanks for the clear added info, Ann
moderator of: The Flea Market [ guidelines ]
You can actually do your own brokerage: it's just paperwork, but it's hard to convince shippers to ship, then hold goods while you do the brokerage. I am fortunate enough to live in Ottawa so I live close to the border... 45 minutes from Ogdensburg, so I always ship UPS to Ogdensburg UPS store which will hold a package for me for $5 ($10 for tires) and you drive across, fetch the goods, and declare it on the way back. The shipper doesn't even have to be UPS to use the UPS store as the final destination. Here's the info.. I have given it out so many times it's gotten on to my friends web page: http://web.quay.net/stuff/ogdensburg
Ding your own brokerage is a bit of a pain, and since Ogdensburg is so close for me I just drive across. Since 95% of the population of Canada lives within 100k of the US border, many of my fellow Canucks have this same option. For those further away, or where there's no UPS store to ship to, it's not so easy, but you could look into doing your own brokerage.
Labeling as gifts only works for items valued under $60 and is technically fraudulent if it's not a gift. The savings on duty on a $60 item is not worth the penalty. The Canada Customs and Revenue Agency takes these matters very seriously. I know because my partner forgot to declare something (1 of several items) at the border and got fined... it could have been much worse.
For those who wonder why bother... I payed $57 a tire for my Blizacs on my Golf... they were $120 each locally. Even after I drive down, paid taxes, the $5 fee, all fees and even the toll on the bridge both ways, I was only into the tires for about $260 total. Locally that would have been $552 for the set. And Camera gear is the same. A lens I have been looking at will be about $620 to my door but is $1,100 locally... and that's before taxes!
Jamie
http://www.cbsa-asfc.gc.ca/publications/pub/bsf5056-eng.html#P020
But don't let that scare you! Often all you pay is GST and PST. If the goods were manufactured in the USA you don't pay duty anyway, and the duty on goods manufactured outside the US is not that bad.. often much less than 3%. When you're saving upwards of 40-60% anyway, who cares about paying 3% on the lesser price!
So if you're gonna tell the truth about the time, may as well tell the truth about why you're there too! "I was shopping" is a perfectly legitimate, and oft-cited reason for crossing the border.