DHL Customs Charge
Moderators: Indiana Jeff, Mike, Indydawg
-
- Archaeology Student
- Posts: 32
- Joined: Thu Jan 15, 2004 6:10 pm
- Location: Huntsville, Alabama
DHL Customs Charge
I just got the customs bill for my Wested jacket. It came from DHL Worldwide Express, not PBB Global, and it was for $79. The invoice shows the following charges:
Customs Duty $9
Customs MPF $25
Processing Fee $5
Single Transaction $40
I was expecting the bill to be $25-30. That's what most of the bills from PBB seem to be. I had it shipped to my work, so they sent the bill to the shipping/receiving dept. instead of to me directly. Would they charge more for a business than for an individual? I'm trying to figure out why there is such a big difference between the PBB and DHL bills.
Customs Duty $9
Customs MPF $25
Processing Fee $5
Single Transaction $40
I was expecting the bill to be $25-30. That's what most of the bills from PBB seem to be. I had it shipped to my work, so they sent the bill to the shipping/receiving dept. instead of to me directly. Would they charge more for a business than for an individual? I'm trying to figure out why there is such a big difference between the PBB and DHL bills.
-
- Professor of Archaeology
- Posts: 723
- Joined: Mon Jul 08, 2002 7:18 am
- Location: Central New Jersey
That is outragous!! The bill should not be that high!
The duty on any object coming into the United States is calculated by
taking the declared value of the object, which is what Peter should have
written on the customs documentation, and you multiply that amount
by 6 percent.
Customs recieves a 6 percent fee for any object with a declared value of
200 american dollars or more. Your jacket should have had a customs
fee of about 15 or 16 dollars. (This is slightly higher than in the past due
to the american dollars current exchange rate).
Then, the DHL charge should have been $7.50, for a total of between
$22 and $23 dollars american.
That extra $40 bucks is bulls**t. On your receipt, there should be a
number to call customs. It is usually the customs agency in New York.
Call them, and ask for the paperwork to dispute your charge. I had to
do that once, and they were actually pretty good about it.
It took them 90 days, but I did get my money back.
Now, the fact that you had your jacket sent to a business may be another
thing altogether. You wouldn't think so, but in todays world, you never
know.
Flathead
The duty on any object coming into the United States is calculated by
taking the declared value of the object, which is what Peter should have
written on the customs documentation, and you multiply that amount
by 6 percent.
Customs recieves a 6 percent fee for any object with a declared value of
200 american dollars or more. Your jacket should have had a customs
fee of about 15 or 16 dollars. (This is slightly higher than in the past due
to the american dollars current exchange rate).
Then, the DHL charge should have been $7.50, for a total of between
$22 and $23 dollars american.
That extra $40 bucks is bulls**t. On your receipt, there should be a
number to call customs. It is usually the customs agency in New York.
Call them, and ask for the paperwork to dispute your charge. I had to
do that once, and they were actually pretty good about it.
It took them 90 days, but I did get my money back.
Now, the fact that you had your jacket sent to a business may be another
thing altogether. You wouldn't think so, but in todays world, you never
know.
Flathead
-
- Laboratory Technician
- Posts: 133
- Joined: Tue Jan 13, 2004 11:11 pm
- Location: Manchester, CT 06040
- Bufflehead Jones
- Legendary Adventurer
- Posts: 3191
- Joined: Sat Feb 14, 2004 10:11 pm
- Location: Maryland
-
- Museum Curator
- Posts: 1685
- Joined: Sat Feb 07, 2004 4:54 pm
- Location: East of Swindiana
Yep, intra-community business is (or, at least, should be) duty-free.I think I got off lucky - maybe because I'm in Europe - I didn't have to pay any extra tax. What about you other European gearheads- is it an EU thing?
When shipping between Europe and USA, the customs fees can be outrageous. When you ship with USPS or other official mail services, the stuff mostly slips through customs. When shipping with one of the big freighters - DHL, UPS, FedEx - they are obligated to record the shipment and report it to the customs officials. In other words - they provide a reliable service, but the again, you won't get away with the import fees...
/SJ
- Indiana Ace
- Dig Worker
- Posts: 18
- Joined: Mon Mar 08, 2004 3:21 pm
- Location: Switzerland
- Indiana Weasel
- Dig Worker
- Posts: 22
- Joined: Sun Feb 29, 2004 12:42 pm
- Location: Gainesville, FL
- Contact:
Well, if I remember rightly, the EU has what the french call T.V.A. which is translates roughly to an added value tax, which is already added in the price. So whenever you go shopping overseas you never have to worry about pesky sales taxes like you do in the states. Since the current state of the EU I think it is pretty much a free trade area with all countries involved, so there shouldn't think there were any duties to be paid. Kinda like US, Canada, and Mexico. Well, at least tequila (nod to Dalex's Joes Cuervo) and whiskey are cheaper.......
- Indiana Ace
- Dig Worker
- Posts: 18
- Joined: Mon Mar 08, 2004 3:21 pm
- Location: Switzerland
- IndyMo
- Dig Leader
- Posts: 599
- Joined: Mon Jul 01, 2002 6:26 pm
- Location: Saratoga Springs, N.Y.
- Contact:
Geesh! that still a $39 customs fee - That seems a bit high.cknight wrote:I called DHL and asked about the charge. The single transaction charge is for some sort of bond. If I fax a copy of the bond to them, then they will remove the $40 charge. I'm not sure what the bond is really for, or what sending them a copy of it does, but that's what they told me.
Mike
-
- Archaeology Student
- Posts: 32
- Joined: Thu Jan 15, 2004 6:10 pm
- Location: Huntsville, Alabama
The actual customs duty was only $9, witha $5 dollar fee to DHL. I forgot to ask what the $25 MPF fee was for.
-- edit - MPF fee was $25, not $5
-- edit - MPF fee was $25, not $5
Last edited by cknight on Sun Mar 14, 2004 5:52 pm, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Professor of Archaeology
- Posts: 723
- Joined: Mon Jul 08, 2002 7:18 am
- Location: Central New Jersey
They seem pretty open like the customs people once you show them thatI called DHL and asked about the charge. The single transaction charge is for some sort of bond. If I fax a copy of the bond to them, then they will remove the $40 charge. I'm not sure what the bond is really for, or what sending them a copy of it does, but that's what they told me.
THEY made a mistake.
BUT, you will ALWAYS have to show them their errors! These types of
businesses will never admit they made a mistake. But once you show them
they did, they are pretty quick to fix it.
It may take a few weeks up to three months to see your money back,
like I did when I disputed my customs charges awhile ago, but I did
eventually get my money.
They want you to fax them a copy of your information because the
person you talked to didn't have a clue as to where to look for your
information!
This is what happened to me with PBB for over a year! Not one single person
I talked to there could find my information about the mistake THEY made
about what I owed them! And I sent them the information 4 different
times!!
It wasn't until Shalimar offered to help me because he lives near PBB
that my problem ended. He had to again, give them ALL my docuements
because they couldn't seem to find a single document of mine that
they are supposed to have had.
Just keep up with these people, and don't give in.
Flathead
-
- Archaeology Student
- Posts: 32
- Joined: Thu Jan 15, 2004 6:10 pm
- Location: Huntsville, Alabama
FYI, I got some more info from Wested:
"According to DHL this end it is all customs charges as your jacket went
through a "Bonded Warehouse". This is a Customs facility and is
normally reserved for Tobacco, Alcohol and other highly taxed items.
Why your jacket has to go through it no-one knows. "
Maybe someone (or some dog) at DHL thought the leather smelled like tobacco.
And some good news - my altered jacket has been shipped, although its been stuck in Cincinnati for about 3 days.
"According to DHL this end it is all customs charges as your jacket went
through a "Bonded Warehouse". This is a Customs facility and is
normally reserved for Tobacco, Alcohol and other highly taxed items.
Why your jacket has to go through it no-one knows. "
Maybe someone (or some dog) at DHL thought the leather smelled like tobacco.
And some good news - my altered jacket has been shipped, although its been stuck in Cincinnati for about 3 days.
- Indiana Weasel
- Dig Worker
- Posts: 22
- Joined: Sun Feb 29, 2004 12:42 pm
- Location: Gainesville, FL
- Contact:
- Indiana Texas-girl
- Expeditionary Hero
- Posts: 2497
- Joined: Mon Jul 01, 2002 12:56 pm
- Location: Deep in the Heart of Texas
- Contact:
Oh my, that doesn't sound right. I'd fight it and let Peter know as well. With the couple of reports of overcharges lately, it's makin' me scared to order a Wested or anything from overseas.Captain D wrote:My DHL charge.......$170 dollars :evil:......Is this right, or should I fight it?
kind regards,
Captain D