How does that work? Seems to me, the trouble (if any)
is for the receiver. Can't imagine that Dutch customs is going
to chase a Chinese seller by the name of Wu Ling, through the
woods of Guadong Qing Qing.
I once had a larger package sent to me, from China. Customs asked
me proof of payment, because the declared value of $300 seemed a
bit low to them. I send them a copy of the bank transfer of ~$4500.
I had to pay the usual VAT and import taxes, but no fine whatsoever.
Ok, I run a business, so VAT is of no importance, and import taxex
are not to bad for most goods. I have little to gain, so I have no reason
to ask for lower declared values.
Frank
----- Original Message -----
From: "jb-electronics" <webmas...@jb-electronics.de>
To: <neonixie-l@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Monday, January 09, 2012 5:31 PM
Subject: Re: [neonixie-l] OT: overseas shipping / customs
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.
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