Importing to the UK - VAT & Delivery info
- Fattyramone
- Art Expert
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- Joined: Thu Mar 22, 2012 10:01 pm
And also , apologies to sidaldo for being snappy with him , sorry mate , my fault , I am a bit grumpy today.
Haha, no worries mate. We all have our days. In fact, thank you for helping me out! Cheers!Fattyramone wrote:And also , apologies to sidaldo for being snappy with him , sorry mate , my fault , I am a bit grumpy today.
Check out my FS/FT/ISO thread: http://forum.expressobeans.com/viewtopi ... 0&t=154080
- Fattyramone
- Art Expert
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- Joined: Thu Mar 22, 2012 10:01 pm
...Homo erotic Palm slaps all round ...
And stop using bloody confusing abbreviations , yer little sod....
'Kin kids and their 'kin secret society 'kin abbreviations , drives me 'kin nuts.....
And stop using bloody confusing abbreviations , yer little sod....
'Kin kids and their 'kin secret society 'kin abbreviations , drives me 'kin nuts.....
Users can't edit a post after 24 hours so Dave can't do it. I've just changed it on the first page though.Fattyramone wrote:Maybe if Dave Suchanoo is reading this he can alter his opening posting and input this new info where the old (now incorrect) tariff number is.
Or maybe you can abuse your position of hacking moderator and do it for him when he's not looking.
The only way to avoid the dreaded charges completely would be to have a value marked below the import threshold. Otherwise unfortunately they'll sting you with their charges to tell you that you have charges.nickd1992 wrote:I recently bought something from Australia and as well as the import VAT, Parcelforce charged me about £12 for 'admin charges and onward sending'. Any suggestions as to how to avoid this happening again?
Other than that you can mark the parcel with codes to try and lessen the charges (see first post) and if that fails you can try and claim some back. You never get the overpriced admin charge back though.
- HippyChick
- Art Connoisseur
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- Joined: Mon Mar 18, 2013 8:15 am
- Location: West Yorkshire, UK
Yup, that's right.dhokes wrote:For commission sketches, is the VAT code 9701 100000 and that should be charged at 5% right?
For Paintings, drawings and pastels, executed entirely by hand, other than drawings of heading 4906 and other than hand-painted or hand-decorated manufactured articles; collages and similar decorative plaques, the commodity code for importing is 9701100000.
Importing from outside the EU is subject to a third country duty of 0.00 %.
Goods are subject to VAT reduced rate 5%
(Heading 4906 is Plans and drawings for architectural, engineering, industrial, commercial, topographical or similar purposes, being originals drawn by hand; handwritten texts; photographic reproductions on sensitised paper and carbon copies of the foregoing)
For original engravings, prints and lithographs (this means impressions produced directly, in black and white or in colour, of one or of several plates wholly executed by hand by the artist, irrespective of the process or of the material employed by him, but not including any mechanical or photomechanical process), the commodity code for importing is 9702000000.
Importing from outside the EU is subject to a third country duty of 0.00 %.
Goods are subject to VAT reduced rate 5%.
https://www.gov.uk/trade-tariff/chapters/97
Cheers. Re. the bit in bold - so if importing from the EU, it's 5% and if outside, it's 0%?HippyChick wrote:Yup, that's right.dhokes wrote:For commission sketches, is the VAT code 9701 100000 and that should be charged at 5% right?
For Paintings, drawings and pastels, executed entirely by hand, other than drawings of heading 4906 and other than hand-painted or hand-decorated manufactured articles; collages and similar decorative plaques, the commodity code for importing is 9701100000.
Importing from outside the EU is subject to a third country duty of 0.00 %.
Goods are subject to VAT reduced rate 5%
(Heading 4906 is Plans and drawings for architectural, engineering, industrial, commercial, topographical or similar purposes, being originals drawn by hand; handwritten texts; photographic reproductions on sensitised paper and carbon copies of the foregoing)
For original engravings, prints and lithographs (this means impressions produced directly, in black and white or in colour, of one or of several plates wholly executed by hand by the artist, irrespective of the process or of the material employed by him, but not including any mechanical or photomechanical process), the commodity code for importing is 9702000000.
Importing from outside the EU is subject to a third country duty of 0.00 %.
Goods are subject to VAT reduced rate 5%.
https://www.gov.uk/trade-tariff/chapters/97
- Fattyramone
- Art Expert
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- Joined: Thu Mar 22, 2012 10:01 pm
Whilst technically correct and above board I wouldn't get too het up and involved with all the legal goobledegook when claiming a refund , just request a refund and give them the correct tariff code that applies to our hobby and have done with it.....don't try and get cocky with them about it.
Half if not most of what we collect doesn't strictly by the letter of the law qualify anyway (most of it is NOT hand pulled etc etc , but farmed out to printing companies)....
Just remember they have a book of tariff codes a mile thick that applies to all sorts of different imported products , as much as it pains to admit it I can sort of understand why they get it wrong so often when you see how many inclusions/exclusions/partial exclusions there are to the "standard" UK 20% vat rate.
With so much to remember/look up they can't be an expert in all the different fields of what's being imported , so just just give them what they need to tick-the-right-box and issue you a refund and keep dialog to a minimum
Most of them only know they're men because they can feel their cocks hitting their knees in the morning and let's keep it that way.
Half if not most of what we collect doesn't strictly by the letter of the law qualify anyway (most of it is NOT hand pulled etc etc , but farmed out to printing companies)....
Just remember they have a book of tariff codes a mile thick that applies to all sorts of different imported products , as much as it pains to admit it I can sort of understand why they get it wrong so often when you see how many inclusions/exclusions/partial exclusions there are to the "standard" UK 20% vat rate.
With so much to remember/look up they can't be an expert in all the different fields of what's being imported , so just just give them what they need to tick-the-right-box and issue you a refund and keep dialog to a minimum
Most of them only know they're men because they can feel their cocks hitting their knees in the morning and let's keep it that way.
- HippyChick
- Art Connoisseur
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- Joined: Mon Mar 18, 2013 8:15 am
- Location: West Yorkshire, UK
There shouldn't be any duty or VAT from within the EU,dhokes wrote:
Cheers. Re. the bit in bold - so if importing from the EU, it's 5% and if outside, it's 0%?
If it's outside the EU there's 0% import duty but 5% VAT, instead of the standard 20% VAT.
cheersHippyChick wrote:There shouldn't be any duty or VAT from within the EU,dhokes wrote:
Cheers. Re. the bit in bold - so if importing from the EU, it's 5% and if outside, it's 0%?
If it's outside the EU there's 0% import duty but 5% VAT, instead of the standard 20% VAT.
- RupertPupkin
- Art Expert
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- Joined: Tue May 09, 2006 12:00 am
- Location: Leeds, UK
Just checking that all the info in the first post is still relevant before I make a claim... anyone made one recently?
this aggression will not stand, man.