Tag: july 2026

  • EU’s €3-Per-Item Duty: What US Shoppers Must Know Before July 1

    EU’s €3-Per-Item Duty: What US Shoppers Must Know Before July 1

    With less than three weeks until July 1, European shoppers who buy from US stores are focused on one number: €150. That’s the threshold below which parcels entered the EU duty-free — until now. But the European Commission’s June 2 implementation guidance for the new customs levy revealed a detail that changes the math considerably: the €3 charge applies per tariff subheading, not simply per parcel.

    How the €3 Duty Actually Works

    From July 1, 2026, every low-value parcel entering the EU from outside the bloc — a category covering roughly 93% of cross-border e-commerce flows — will attract a €3 customs duty for each distinct type of goods it contains, classified by their 10-digit TARIC commodity code. A single parcel with a single item type: one €3 charge. A parcel combining different product categories: one charge per category.

    The European Commission used this illustrative breakdown in its June guidance: a parcel containing silk blouses and wool blouses incurs two separate €3 charges, not one, because those two garment types fall under different tariff subheadings. That example extends across all product categories — clothing, electronics, cosmetics, sporting goods.

    In plain terms:

    • Five identical items (same product, same tariff code) in one parcel → €3 total duty
    • Five items from five different product categories in one parcel → €15 total duty
    • Two parcels each containing different item types → duty charged on each separately

    This is a meaningful cost difference for shoppers who routinely bundle unrelated purchases — a pair of sneakers, a supplement, and a kitchen gadget, say — into one consolidated shipment.

    Why This Matters for Shopping From US Stores

    The rule targets all non-EU sellers registered under the Import One-Stop Shop (IOSS) scheme — the mechanism most major US retailers and marketplaces use to handle EU VAT at point of sale. If you’ve been shopping at US retailers and forwarding goods home to Europe, your shipments fall squarely within scope.

    The duty is temporary, running from July 1, 2026 to mid-2028 while the EU builds its permanent Customs Data Hub. A second charge — a €2 customs handling fee — is expected to be layered on top in November 2026, bringing the per-item-type cost to €5 per tariff line.

    Neither fee sounds large on its own, but they compound quickly on mixed-category orders. A five-item haul spanning four different product types would incur €20 in handling charges under the full November 2026 fee structure — before standard customs duties apply to any goods that already carry them (electronics, textiles, etc.).

    Practical Strategies to Minimize Your Duty Bill

    The per-subheading structure rewards shoppers who are deliberate about how they group purchases:

    • Batch by product type. Instead of shipping a mixed haul, consolidate all clothing in one shipment and electronics in another. Each shipment pays €3 once, regardless of how many units of the same product type it contains.
    • Act before July 1. Purchases already in transit or cleared before the deadline leave the EU under the old rules. If you’ve been holding off on a US order, the next two weeks are your window.
    • Bundle quantity, not variety. Buying three of the same item from the same store costs the same €3 duty as buying one. Resellers in particular can leverage this — buy deeper in one SKU per shipment rather than sampling across categories.
    • Factor duty into your cost comparison. US prices remain compelling even with the new fee, but run the full landed-cost math: item price + US sales tax (often avoidable via Oregon-based addresses) + shipping + €3 per product type + any applicable customs duty rate.

    What to Do Right Now

    If you have packages waiting at a US warehouse, now is the time to review what’s in each shipment and whether consolidating by product category makes sense before dispatching. If you use Viabox — which gives you a real Portland, Oregon address with no monthly fee — their consolidation service lets you hold multiple incoming packages and combine them into a single outbound shipment. Going into July, grouping similar items together before you ship is one of the simplest ways to keep your EU customs bill predictable.

    For shoppers who’ve been on the fence about a US purchase: the window before the July 1 cutoff is short but real. Orders that arrive at your US forwarding address and ship out before July 1 clear EU customs under the current zero-duty rules for sub-€150 parcels.

    The Bigger Picture

    The EU’s customs overhaul reflects a global pattern: governments that built their e-commerce import rules around the old direct-from-factory, low-value parcel model are systematically closing the gap. The US ended de minimis treatment for China-origin parcels in August 2025. The EU is following with this July 2026 measure. The UK has flagged reforms to its own £135 threshold before 2029.

    None of this eliminates the value of shopping US stores for international buyers. US retail depth, brand availability, and pricing — particularly in categories like outdoor gear, supplements, beauty, electronics accessories, and fashion — remain hard to match locally for shoppers across Europe, the Gulf, Latin America, and Asia. The calculus is shifting, not reversing. Knowing exactly how the new charges apply puts you ahead of the majority of shoppers still running on old assumptions.

    Ready to put your US address to work? Log in to your Viabox dashboard to manage shipments and consolidate packages — or create your free US address in minutes.

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