De Minimis Values by Country
In international shipping, de minimis refers to the value threshold below which imported goods may be exempt from customs duties, taxes, or certain import procedures. These thresholds help simplify customs processing for lower-value shipments but vary significantly from one country to another and may be subject to specific conditions, exceptions, or regulatory requirements.
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Table of Contents:
- What Is a De Minimis Threshold?
- Global De Minimis Thresholds by Country
- Countries with Special De Minimis Rules
- Territories or Microstates with Non-Standard Rules
- What Parcel Forwarding Customers Should Know About De Minimis Thresholds
- Key Definitions
- Regional Differences
- De Minimis Thresholds at forward2me Locations: Tax and Duty at a Glance
- FAQs
- Making Parcel Forwarding Easier for You
What Is a De Minimis Threshold?
A de minimis threshold is the minimum value of imported goods below which no customs duties are charged. Many countries use such thresholds to reduce the administrative burden of collecting duties on very low-value items.
Even when customs duties are not collected on shipments below a country’s de minimis value, other taxes or excise duties (e.g., on alcohol or tobacco) may still apply, including VAT – either at the point of sale or import.
For example, in the United Kingdom the duty de minimis is £135. This means that:
- For consignments valued at £135 or less, no customs duties apply. VAT is still due and must be collected by the seller at the point of sale, not at import. Other applicable taxes or excise duties may also apply.
- For consignments valued above £135, customs duties and other applicable taxes are due, with VAT collected at the point of import.
It’s important to note that the method customs uses to calculate the customs value of goods may differ from the declared value. Valuation is often based on transaction value, deductive value, or computed value. If the declared value is artificially lowered, customs may apply their own (often higher) valuation method.
Batteries – What You Can and Cannot Ship
Countries with Special De Minimis Rules
These countries have de minimis rules that are non-standard, involve complex thresholds, or have a history of strict or inconsistent enforcement:
| Country | Key Details |
|---|---|
| Australia | GST from AUD $0; duty-free up to AUD $1,000; sellers must register for GST. Read more about Australian GST. |
| Brazil | No consistent threshold; taxes often apply to all imports; heavy enforcement. |
| Canada | Dual thresholds: CAD $20 (postal) vs. CAD $150 (courier under USMCA). |
| China | Tax rules vary by item category and purpose (personal vs. commercial). |
| European Union* | VAT from €0; customs duties above €150; complex since 2021 reforms. |
| India | Practical de minimis is zero; customs duties often apply to all imports. |
| Israel | VAT exemption below ILS 75, but partial exemptions apply by item type. |
| Japan | Threshold of JPY 10,000; exemptions for gifts/samples; product-dependent. |
| Mexico | Dual thresholds (USD $50 postal / USD $117 courier); document-heavy process. |
| New Zealand | GST applies above NZD $1,000; duties vary; recent changes to B2C imports. |
| Norway | VAT from NOK 0; full clearance above NOK 3,000; VOEC system for sellers. |
| Russia | EUR 200/month personal limit; frequent seizure of undervalued packages. |
| Singapore | SGD $400 de minimis; tight customs documentation even for low-value items. |
| South Korea | USD $150 de minimis; drops to USD $100 if shipped from US; many exclusions. |
| Turkey | Very low threshold; strict customs scrutiny; extra surcharges common. |
| United Kingdom | VAT applies below £135 for online goods; duties start above; marketplace obligations. |
| United States** | |
| Under an Executive Order signed by President Trump, duty-free de minimis treatment is eliminated as of August 29, 2025. |
*The EU’s Harmonized De Minimis Threshold
The European Union applies a single customs duty de minimis threshold of €150 across all member states.
For imports from outside the EU:
- €150 or less
- No customs duties.
- VAT always applies: collected at the point of sale if the seller uses the Import One-Stop Shop (IOSS), or at import if not.
- Above €150
- Customs duties apply (rate depends on the goods).
- VAT is collected at import.
For shipments within the EU (intra-EU trade):
- No customs duties, regardless of value.
- VAT charged at the point of sale in the seller’s country.
**The US De Minimis Threshold Has Been Removed
The long-standing $800 de minimis rule has been eliminated. All imports, regardless of value or origin, are subject to duties and taxes.
- Gifts: Up to $100 (or $200 if from Guam, American Samoa, or the US Virgin Islands), sent individual-to-individual and declared as unsolicited.
- Samples/promotional items with no commercial value.
- Informational materials such as books, printed media, and physical media.
- US goods returned unaltered, with documentation.
- Temporary imports under bond (e.g., for repair or exhibition) if re-exported within the approved timeframe.
All other shipments – personal or commercial – require customs entry and are subject to HTS duties, tariffs, and applicable excise taxes.
Territories or Microstates with Non-Standard Rules
These territories or jurisdictions follow distinct customs regimes compared to their mainland counterparts, or are treated uniquely by destination countries:
| Territory | Key Details |
|---|---|
| Andorra | Independent microstate; not in EU; has special customs and tax arrangements with EU countries. |
| Campione d'Italia | Italian enclave in Switzerland; unique treatment for customs and taxes. |
| Canary Islands | Spanish territory with a separate tax regime (IGIC instead of VAT). |
| Ceuta and Melilla | Autonomous Spanish cities in North Africa treated as third territories for VAT and excluded from EU customs union. |
| Colombia | Special treatment for online purchases and courier imports; exemptions not uniform. |
| Guernsey* | Part of the Channel Islands; operates independently from UK VAT system. |
| Hong Kong | Very few tariffs; considered a free port; excise duties apply to a few goods only. |
| Jersey | Part of the Channel Islands, separate customs and tax authority from the UK. GST = 5%, applies to imports from the first £. |
| Lake Lugano | Swiss-Italian border area with special customs considerations. |
| Liechtenstein | Shares customs union with Switzerland, but VAT application can vary. |
| Livigno | Italian town designated as a duty-free area; outside EU VAT territory. |
| Macau | Generally duty-free; some categories taxed; limited public data on thresholds. |
| Qatar | Thresholds and exemptions vary; enforcement practices less standardized. |
| San Marino | Enclaved microstate with a customs union with Italy but separate VAT system. |
| Svalbard | Tax-exempt region within Norway; shipments to mainland may trigger duties. |
| Vatican City | Independent city-state; exempt from VAT and duties; imports regulated through Italy. |
* Guernsey does not charge VAT on local sales or exports, but duties are applied in the same way as in the UK. While shipments from the UK to Guernsey may avoid both VAT and duties, shipments from outside the UK may still incur duties, even if VAT is not applied. It’s important to note that Guernsey’s VAT rules do not affect taxes or duties in the destination country.
What Parcel Forwarding Customers Should Know About De Minimis Thresholds
If you’re using a parcel forwarding service to shop internationally, it’s important to understand how de minimis thresholds affect your shipment. These thresholds determine whether your imported package will be subject to customs duties or taxes, and they vary by country.
While forward2me can help you consolidate multiple orders into one shipment, doing so may push the total value above the de minimis limit, triggering fees you might not expect.
In some cases, customs may even combine separate parcels sent to the same address if they arrive close together, treating them as a single consignment. To avoid surprises, always declare the true value of your goods, check whether your destination country includes shipping costs in the customs value, and review any exemptions or exclusions that may be taxed regardless of value.
De Minimis Taxes and Duties Explained in 4 Easy Steps
Step 1: Item Purchased
You buy a product online worth €120 and ship it to your French address.
- From another EU country: no customs checks apply.
- From outside the EU: the parcel will be checked at the French border.
Step 2: Customs Duties
From another EU country: no customs duties are charged.
- From outside the EU:
- Under €150 → no customs duty.
- Over €150 → customs duty applies.
Step 3: VAT Is Applied
- From another EU country: VAT is charged at the point of sale or at the point of import if the seller uses the One Stop Shop (OSS) scheme.
- From outside the EU: France’s standard VAT rate will be applied, even if the shipment is below the €150 customs duty threshold.
Step 4: Parcel Delivered
Once VAT, customs duties, and any excise duties (e.g., on alcohol or tobacco) are accounted for – either prepaid at checkout or collected on import – the parcel is released and delivered.