|
.
Your source for free Consumer
Reports on Automobiles, Children, School, Insurance, Business, Safety,
Government benefits and much more.
-
Check Out More
- FREE Reports!
- How to Buy a used Car the Smart Way
Nine Ways to Lower Your Auto Insurance
Buying a Safer Car
66 Ways to Save Money
Guide to Getting a Government Job
The Small Business Handbook (128 pages)
Inside Guide to Air Quality
"Hottest Brand-new
Software Collection on the Web!
Over 50 brand new
"must-have" software programs in one amazing
package!
http://24-7-ebiz.com/
You will absolutely love using these profitable, time-saving
new software tools!
But we are also giving you the master resale rights to them
all...
so you can offer this huge, new software collection to others,
using a copy of this website ... and YOU keep all the money!
And because customers download the software themselves, your
costs per sale are zero!
So you keep the full 100% of every sale!
And you won't find a better profit margin than that!
http://24-7-ebiz.com/
What you are getting is a ready-made 100%
Profit 'Software Business' which others charge hundreds of
dollars for...
Check Out
What's
In This GREAT Package Now:
FREE
World Wide Resell Rights. 
|
Cost of Owning & Operating Autos
How to Communicate for Better Auto Service
Growing a Healthy and Safe Lawn
New Car Buying Guide
How to Buy Surplus Property from the Military
Guide to Buying Used Government Property
How to Buy Land from the Government
Finding & Purchasing Government Lands
|
Website
templates, Flash Intro Templates, Logo
Templates
Easily
create a unique web presence INSTANTLY using
pre-made designs and templates of the highest
quality. We have searched
for the best, and these pre-made web designs
can easily be customized to reflect your
company's branding. Highly
Recommended!
CLICK
HERE NOW
|
|

|
Helping Your Child Learn Responsible Behavior
Books for Children - a Reading List
Business Credit for Women & Minorities
Consumer Handbook for Credit Protection
How to Claim Government Benefits
Eating for Life - healthy eating to live longer
Earn up to 56% With Our
Powerful Associate Program
What's Fair in Collecting Debts
A Consumer's Guide to Fats in Foods
Guide to Federal Help for the Disabled
Your Home Fire Safety Checklist
A Consumer Guide to Air Travel
Fly Smart - How to enjoy your next flight
Foreign Country Entry Requirements
Getting Your GED

Helping Your Child Learn Geography
Helping Your Child Get Ready for School
Consumer Handbook on Adjustable Rate Mortgages
Helping Your Child Be Healthy & Fit
Helping Your Child Succeed in School
Helping Your Child Learn Math
Earn up to 56% With Our
Powerful Associate Program
Helping Your Child Learn to Read
Helping your Child Learn History
Preparing Your Child for College
Staying Independent in Your Older Years
Guide to Invention Promotion Scams
What You Should Know About Life Insurance
Lost or Stolen: Credit and ATM Cards
The Medicare Handbook

60 Commonly Asked Questions About Medicare
Guide to Health Insurance for People with Medicaid
Invest Wisely - A Guide to Mutual Funds
Naturalization Requirements & General
Information
Customs Rules for Returning Residents
General Information Concerning Patents
Guide to Pesticides & Toxic Substances
Emergency Preparedness Checklist
Solving Credit Problems
Read It Before You Eat It!
Creating Resumes & Cover Letters that Work!
Your Guide to Social Security Benefits
Swindlers are Calling!
How Investment Swindles Work
Schools Without Drugs - A Plan for us all
Timeless Classics - A Reading List
Guide to Trademarks
Federal Benefits for Veterans & Dependents
Guide to Obtaining Vital Records
You
Can Sell Anything On The Internet!!!
"The
Secret"
-
|
|
Free Information
Reserve Center
|

|
|

Click Here for More Info
- Customs Rules for Returning Residents
-
- KNOW BEFORE YOU GO
-
- CONTENTS
-
- Your Declaration
- Oral, written, family
-
- Warning--Penalties
- Underevaluation, failure to declare
-
- Your Exemptions
- $400, $600, $1200, $25
- Cigars, cigarettes, alcoholic beverages
- Time limitations
-
- Gifts
- Mailed to friends and relatives
- Accompanying you
-
- Other Articles: Free of Duty or Dutiable
- Duty-free products from developing countries
- Personal belongings mailed home
- Foreign-made articles taken abroad
- Vehicles, airplanes, boats taken abroad
- Household effects
- Flat rates of duty
- Payment of duty
- Various rates of duty
-
- Prohibited and Restricted Articles
- Prohibited items
- Artifacts (see Cultural Property)
- Automobiles
- Biological materials
- Books, records, computer programs and cassettes
- Ceramic tableware
- Cultural property (pre-Columbian)
- Drug paraphernalia
- Firearms, ammunition
- Food products, fruits and vegetables
- Gold
- Meats, livestock, poultry
- Medicine containing narcotics, fraudulent drugs
- and medical devices
- Merchandise from Cambodia (Kampuchea), Cuba,
- Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, and Vietnam
- Money and other monetary instruments
- Pets
- Plants
- Textiles
- Trademarked articles
- Wildlife and fish
-
- Customs Pointers
- Traveling back and forth across the border
- "Duty-free" shops, sales slips
- Packing your baggage, photographic film
- Shipping hints: mail, express, freight
- Unaccompanied tourist purchases
- Storage charges
- Notice to California residents
-
- Location of Customs Offices
-
- Your Declaration
-
- You must declare all articles acquired abroad and in your
- possession at the time of your return. This includes:
- * Articles that you purchased.
- * Gifts presented to you while abroad, such as wedding or
- birthday presents.
- * Articles purchased in duty-free shops.
- * Repairs or alterations made to any articles taken abroad
- and returned, whether or not repairs or alterations were
- free of charge.
- * Items you have been requested to bring home for another
- person.
- * Any articles you intend to sell or use in your business.
- In addition, you must declare any articles acquired in
- the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, or Guam and not
- accompanying you at the time of your return.
- The price actually paid for each article must be stated on
- your declaration in U.S. currency or its equivalent in country
- of acquisition. If the article was not purchased, obtain an
- estimate of its fair retail value in the country in which it
- was acquired.
- Note: The wearing or use of any article acquired abroad
- does not exempt it from duty. It must be declared at the price
- you paid for it. The Customs officer will make an appropriate
- reduction in its value for significant wear and use.
-
- Oral Declaration
-
- Customs declaration forms are distributed on vessels and
- planes and should be prepared in advance of arrival for
- presentation to the Immigration and Customs inspectors. Fill
- out the identification portion of the declaration form. You may
- declare orally to the Customs inspector the articles you
- acquired abroad if the articles are accompanying you and you
- have not exceeded the duty-free exemption allowed (see pages
- 5-7). A Customs officer may, however, ask you to prepare a
- written list if it is necessary.
-
- Written Declaration
-
- A written declaration will be necessary when:
- * The total fair retail value of articles acquired abroad
- exceeds your personal exemption (see pages 5-7).
- * More than one liter (33.8 fl. oz.) of alcoholic beverages,
- 200 cigarettes (one carton), or 100 cigars are included.
- * Some of the items are not intended for your personal or
- household use, such as commercial samples, items for sale
- or use in your business, or articles you are bringing home
- for another person.
- * Articles acquired in the U.S. Virgin Islands, American
- Samoa, or Guam are being sent to the U.S.
- * A customs duty or internal revenue tax is collectible on
- any article in your possession.
- * A Customs officer requests a written list.
- * If you have used your exemption in the last 30 days.
-
- Family Declaration
-
- The head of a family may make a joint declaration for all
- members residing in the same household and returning together
- to the United States. Family members making a joint declaration
- may combine their personal exemptions (see pages 5-7), even if
- the articles acquired by one member of the family exceeds the
- personal exemption allowed.
- Infants and children returning to the United States are
- entitled to the same exemptions as adults (except for alcoholic
- beverages). Children born abroad, who have never resided in the
- United States, are entitled to the customs exemptions granted
- nonresidents.
- Visitors to the United States should obtain the leaflet
- Customs Hints for Visitors (Nonresidents).
- Military and civilian personnel of the U.S. Government
- should obtain the leaflet Customs Highlights for Government
- Personnel for information about their customs exemptions when
- returning from an extended duty assignment abroad.
-
- WARNING!
-
- If you understate the value of an article declare, or if
- you otherwise misrepresent an article in your declaration, you
- may have to pay a penalty in addition to payment of duty. Under
- certain circumstances, the article could be seized and
- forfeited if the penalty is not paid.
- It is well known that some merchants abroad offer
- travelers invoices or bills of sale showing false or
- understated values. This practice not only delays your customs
- examination, but can prove very costly.
- If you fall to declare an article acquired abroad, not
- only is the article subject to seizure and forfeiture, but you
- will be liable for a personal penalty in an amount equal to the
- value of the article the United States. In addition, you may
- also be liable to criminal prosecution.
- Don't rely on advice given by persons outside the Customs
- Service. It may be bad advice which could lead you to violate
- the customs laws and incur costly penalties.
- If in doubt about whether an article should be declared,
- always declare it first and then direct your question to the
- Customs inspector. If in doubt about the value of an article,
- declare the article at the actual price paid (transaction
- value).
- Customs inspectors handle tourist items day after day and
- become acquainted with the normal foreign values. Moreover,
- current commercial prices of foreign items are available at all
- times and the-spot comparisons of these values can be made.
- Play it safe--avoid customs penalties
-
- Your Exemptions
-
- In clearing U.S. Customs, a traveler is considered either
- a "returning resident of the United States" or a
"nonresident."
- Generally speaking, if you leave the United States for
- purposes of traveling, working or studying abroad and return to
- resume residency in the United States, you are considered a
- returning resident by Customs.
- However, U.S. residents living abroad temporarily are
- entitled to be classified as nonresidents, and thus receive
- more liberal Customs exemptions, on short visits to the United
- States, provided they export any foreign-acquired items at the
- completion of their visit.
- Residents of American Samoa, Guam, or the U.S. Virgin
- Islands, who are American citizens, are also considered as
- returning U.S. residents.
- Articles acquired abroad and brought into the United
- States are subject to applicable duty and internal revenue tax,
- but as a returning resident you are allowed certain exemptions
- from paying duty on items obtained while abroad.
-
- $400 Exemption
-
- Articles totaling $400 (based on the fair retail value of
- each item in the country where acquired) may be entered free of
- duty, subject to the limitations on liquors, cigarettes, and
- cigars, if:
- * Articles were acquired as an incident of your trip for
- your personal or household use.
- * You bring the articles with you at the time of your return
- to the United States and they are properly declared to
- Customs. Articles purchased and left for alterations or
- other reasons cannot be applied to your $400 exemption
- when shipped to follow at a later date. The 10% flat rate
- of duty does not apply to mailed articles (See pages
- 24-26.) Duty is assessed when received.
- * You are returning from a stay abroad of at least 48 hours.
- Example: A resident who leaves United States territory at
- 1:30 p.m. on June 1st would complete the required 48-hour
- period at 1:30 p.m. on June 3rd. This time limitation does
- not apply if you are returning from Mexico or the Virgin
- Islands of the U.S.
- * You have not used this $400 exemption, or any part of it,
- within the preceding 30-day period. Also, your exemption
- is not cumulative. If you use a portion of your exemption
- on entering the United States, then you must wait for 30
- days before you are entitled to another exemption other
- than a $25 exemption. (See page 7.)
- * Articles are not prohibited or restricted. See page 15.
- Cigars and Cigarettes: Not more than 100 cigars and 200
- cigarettes (one carton) may be included in your exemption.
- Products of Cuban tobacco may be included if purchased in Cuba,
- see page 20. This exemption is available to each person
- regardless of age. Your cigarettes, however, may be subject to
- a tax imposed by state and local authorities.
- Liquor: One liter (33.8 fl. oz.) of alcoholic beverages
- may be included in this exemption if:
- * You are 21 years of age or older.
- * It is for your own use or for use as a gift.
- * It is not in violation of the laws of the state in which
- you arrive.
- Note: Most states restrict the quantity of alcoholic
- beverages you may import, and you must meet state alcoholic
- beverage laws in addition to federal ones. If the state in
- which you arrive permits less liquor than you have legally
- brought into the United States, that state's laws prevail.
- Information about state restrictions and taxes should be
- obtained from the state government as laws vary from state to
- state.
- Alcoholic beverages in excess of the one-liter limitation
- are subject to duty and internal revenue tax.
- Shipping of alcoholic beverages by mail is prohibited by
- United States postal laws. Alcoholic beverages include wine and
- beer as well as distilled spirits.
-
- $600 and $1200 Exemptions
-
- If you return directly or indirectly from a U.S. insular
- possession--American Samoa, Guam, or the U.S. Virgin
- Islands--you may receive a customs exemption of $1200 (based
- upon the transaction value of the articles in the country where
- acquired). You may also bring in 1,000 cigarettes, but only 200
- of them may have been acquired elsewhere.
- If you are returning from any of the following 24
- beneficiary countries, your customs exemption is $600, based
- upon fair market value:
- Antigua and Barbuda Grenada Panama
- Aruba Guatemala Saint Christopher/Kitts
- Bahamas Guyana and Nevis
- Barbados Haiti Saint Lucia
- Belize Honduras Saint Vincent and
- Costa Rica Jamaica the Grenadines
- Dominica Montserrat Trinidad and Tobago
- Dominican Republic Netherlands Virgin Islands,
- El Salvador Antilles British
- Nicaragua
- In the case of the $1200 exemption, up to $600 worth of
- the merchandise may have been obtained in any of the
- beneficiary countries listed above, or up to $400 in any other
- country. For example, if you traveled to the U.S. Virgin
- Islands and Jamaica and then returned home, you would be
- entitled to bring in $1200 worth of merchandise duty-free. Of
- this amount, $600 worth may have been acquired in Jamaica.
- In the case of the $600 exemption, up to $400 worth of
- merchandise may have been acquired in other foreign countries.
- For instance, if you travel to England and the Bahamas, and
- then return home, your exemption is $600, $400 of which may
- have been acquired in England.
-
- $25 Exemption
-
- If you cannot claim the $400, $600, or $1200 exemptions,
- because of the 30-day or 48-hour minimum limitations, you may
- bring in free of duty and tax articles acquired abroad for your
- personal or household use if the total fair retail value-does
- not exceed $25. This is an individual exemption and may not be
- grouped with other members of a family on one customs
- declaration.
- You may include any of the following: 50 cigarettes, 10
- cigars, 150 milliliters (4 fl. oz.) of alcoholic beverages, or
- 150 milliliters (4 fl. oz.) of alcoholic perfume. Cuban tobacco
- products brought directly from Cuba may be included.
- Alcoholic beverages cannot be mailed into the United
- States. Customs enforces the liquor laws of the state in which
- you arrive. Because state laws vary greatly as to the quantity
- of alcoholic beverages which can be brought in, we suggest you
- consult the appropriate state authorities.
- If any article brought with you is subject to duty or tax,
- or if the total value of all dutiable articles exceeds $25, no
- article may be exempted from duty or tax.
-
- Gifts
-
- Bona fide gifts of not more than $50 in fair retail value
- where shipped can be received by friends and relations in the
- United States free of duty and tax, if the same person does not
- receive more than $50 in gift shipments in one day. The
"day"
- in reference is the day in which the parcel(s) are received for
- customs processing. This amount is increased to $100 if shipped
- from the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, or Guam. These
- gifts are not declared by you upon your return to the States.
- Gifts accompanying you are considered to be for your
- personal use and may be included within your exemption. This
- includes gifts given to you by others while abroad and those
- you intend to give to others after you return. Gifts intended
- for business, promotional or other commercial purposes may not
- be included.
- Perfume containing alcohol valued at more than $5 retail,
- tobacco products, and alcoholic beverages are excluded from the
- gift provision.
- Gifts intended for more than one person may be
- consolidated in the same package provided they are individually
- wrapped and labeled with the name of the recipient.
- Be sure that the outer wrapping of the package is marked
- 1) unsolicited gift, 2) nature of the gift, and 3) its fair
- retail value. In addition, a consolidated girl parcel should be
- marked as such on the outside with the names of the recipients
- listed and the value of each gift. This will facilitate customs
- clearance of your package.
- If any article imported in the gift parcel is subject to
- duty and tax, or if the total value of all articles exceeds the
- bona fide gift allowance, no article may be exempt from duty or
- tax.
- If a parcel is subject to duty, the United States Postal
- Service will collect the duty plus a handling charge in the
- form of "Postage Due" stamps. Duty cannot be prepaid.
- You, as a traveler, cannot send a "gift" parcel to
- yourself nor can persons traveling together send
"gifts" to
- each other. Gifts ordered by mail from the United States do not
- qualify under this duty-free gift provision and are subject to
- duty:
-
- Other Articles: free of duty or dutiable
-
- Duty preferences are granted to certain developing
- countries under the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP).
- Some products from these countries have been exempted from duty
- which would otherwise be collected if imported from any other
- country. For details, obtain the leaflet GSP & The Traveler
- from your nearest Customs office. Many products of certain
- Caribbean countries are also exempt from duty under the
- Caribbean Basin Initiative (CBI). Most products of Israel may
- enter the United States either free of duty or at a reduced
- duty rate. Check with Customs.
- The U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement was implemented on
- January 1, 1989. U.S. returning residents arriving directly or
- indirectly from Canada are eligible for free or reduced duty
- rates as applicable, on goods originating in Canada as defined
- in the Agreement.
- Personal belongings of United States origin are entitled
- to entry free of duty. Personal belongings taken abroad, such
- as worn clothing, etc., may be sent home by mail before you
- return and receive free entry provided they have not been
- altered or repaired while abroad. These packages should be
- marked "American Goods Returned." When a claim of
United States
- origin is made, marking on the article to so indicate
- facilitates customs processing.
- Foreign-made personal articles taken abroad are dutiable
- each time they are brought into our country unless you have
- acceptable proof of prior possession. Documents which fully
- describe the article, such as a bill of sale, insurance policy,
- jeweler's appraisal, or receipt for purchase, may be considered
- reasonable proof of prior possession.
- Items such as watches, cameras, tape recorders, or other
- articles which may be readily identified by serial number or
- permanently affixed markings, may be taken to the Customs
- office nearest you and registered before your departure. The
- Certificate of Registration provided will expedite free entry
- of these items when you return. Keep the certificate as it is
- valid for any future trips as long. as the information on it
- remains legible.
- Registration cannot be accomplished by telephone nor can
- blank registration forms be given or mailed to you to be filled
- out at a later time.
- Automobiles, boats, planes, etc., or other vehicles taken
- abroad for noncommercial use may be returned duty free by
- proving to the Customs officer that you took them out of the
- United States. This proof may be the state registration card
- for an automobile, the Federal Aviation Administration
- certificate for an aircraft, a yacht license or motorboat
- identification certificate for a pleasure boat, or a customs
- certificate of registration obtained before departure.
- Dutiable repairs or accessories acquired abroad for
- articles taken out of the United States must be declared on
- your return.
- Warning: Catalytic-equipped vehicles (1976 or later model
- years) driven outside the United States, Canada, or Mexico will
- not, in most cases, meet EPA standards when brought back to the
- U.S. As unleaded fuel generally is not available in other
- countries, the catalytic converter will become inoperative and
- must be replaced. Contact Environmental Protection Agency,
- Washington, D.C. 20460, for details and exceptions. (See page
- 16.)
- Your local Customs office has the following leaflets which
- will be of interest--Importing a Car and Pleasure Boats. You
- may purchase Customs Guide for Private Flyers from your local
- Government Printing Office bookstore. Consult your local
- telephone book under "U.S. Government."
- Household effects and tools of trade or occupation which
- you take out of the United States are duty free at the time you
- return if properly declared and entered.
- All furniture, carpets, paintings, tableware, linens, and
- similar household furnishings acquired abroad may be imported
- free of duty, if:
- * They are not imported for another person or for sale.
- * They have been used abroad by you for not less than one
- year or were available for use in a household in which you
- were resident member for one year. This privilege does not
- include articles placed in storage outside the home. The
- year of use need not be continuous nor does it need to be
- the year immediately preceding the date of importation.
- Shipping time may not be included in the computation of
- the one year. in use. For information on freight
- shipments, see page 25.
- Items such as wearing apparel, jewelry, photograph
- equipment, tape recorders, stereo components, and vehicles are
- considered as personal articles and cannot be passed free of
- duty as household effects.
- Articles imported in excess of your customs exemption will
- be subject to duty unless the items are entitled to free entry
- or prohibited.
- The inspector will place the items having the highest rate
- of duty under your exemption, and duty will be assessed on the
- lower-rated items.
- After deducting your exemptions and the value of any
- articles duty free, a fiat 10 percent rate of duty will be
- applied to the next $1,000 worth (fair retail value) of
- merchandise. Any dollar amount of an article or articles over
- $1,000 will be dutiable at the various rates of duty applicable
- to the articles.
- Articles to which the flat rate of duty is applied must be
- for your personal use or for use as gifts and you cannot
- receive this fiat rate provision more than once every 30 days,
- excluding the day of your last arrival.
- The flat rate of duty is 5% for articles purchased in the
- U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, or Guam, whether the
- articles accompany you or are shipped.
- Example: You acquire goods valued at $ 2,500 from:
- U.S. insular possessions:
- Personal exemption (free of duty) .....up to $1,200
- Flat duty rate at 5% ...................next $1,000
- Various rates of duty ...............remaining $300
- --------
- Total .................................$ 2,500
-
- Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act countries:
- Personal exemption (free of duty) .....up to $600
- Flat duty rate at 10% ................next $1,000
- Various rates of duty .............remaining $900
- -------
- Total ...............................$ 2,500
-
- Other countries or locations:
- Personal exemption (free of duty) .....up to $400
- Flat duty rate at 10% ................next $1,000
- Various rates of duty ...........remaining $1,100
- --------
- Total ...............................$ 2,500
-
- The flat rate of duty will apply to any articles which are
- dutiable and cannot be included in your personal exemption,
- even if you have not exceeded the dollar amount of your
- exemption. Example: you are returning from Europe with $200
- worth of articles which includes 2 liters of liquor. One liter
- will be free of duty under your exemption, the other dutiable
- at 10%, plus any internal revenue tax.
- Members of a family residing in one household traveling
- together on their return to the U.S. will group articles for
- application of the fiat duty rate without regard as to which
- member of the family may be the owner of the articles.
- Payment of duty, required at the time of your arrival on
- articles accompanying you, may be made by any of the following
- ways:
- * U.S. currency (foreign currency is not acceptable).
- * Personal check in the exact amount of duty, drawn on a
- national or state bank or trust company of the United
- States, made payable to the "U.S. Customs Service."
- * Government check, money orders or traveler's checks are
- acceptable if they do not exceed the amount of the duty by
- more than $50. [Second endorsements are not acceptable,
- Identification must be presented; e.g. traveler's passport
- or driver's license].
- * In some locations you may pay duty with credit cards from
- Discover, Mastercard and VISA.
- Goods covered by an ATA Carnet: Residents returning to the
- U.S. with goods covered by an ATA carnet are reminded to report
- to a Customs Inspector upon their arrival. The inspector will
- examine the covered goods against the carnet and certify the
- appropriate reimportation counterfoil and voucher. The carnet
- will serve as the customs control registration document and no
- entry or payment of duty will be necessary as long as the goods
- qualify as U.S. goods returned and are being brought back into
- the United States within the validity period of the carnet.
-
- Rates of Duty
-
- Various rates of duty for some of the more popular items
- imported by tourists are provided for use as an advisory guide
- only. If you have dutiable articles not subject to a fiat rate
- of duty, the Customs officer examining your baggage will
- determine the rates of duty.
- Rates of duty on imported goods are provided for in the
- Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States. There are two
- duty rates for each item, known as "column 1" and
"column 2."
- Column 1 rates are those applicable to most favored nations.
- Column 2 rates are higher and apply to products from the
- following countries.
- Afghanistan Kampuchea North Korea*
- Albania Laos Rumania
- Bulgaria Latvia Union of Soviet
- Cuba* Lithuania Socialist Republics
- Estonia Mongolia Vietnam *
- NOTE: The tariff duty status accorded to these countries
- is subject to change. Please check with Customs for updated
- information.
- Products of the above listed column 2 countries are
- dutiable at the column 2 rates of duty, even if purchased in or
- sent from another country. Example: A crystal vase made in
- Rumania and purchased in Switzerland would be dutiable at the
- column 2 rate. If the article accompanies you, however, it may
- be entered under your duty-free personal exemption or the flat
- rate of duty allowance.
- * Goods from, or products of, these countries are subject to
- foreign assets controls, see page 20.
-
- ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
-
- (Subject to federal excise taxes, which greatly exceed
- Customs duties. These-taxes vary from approximately 15 cents
- per liter for beer to more than $3.50 per proof liter for
- distilled spirits, liquors, and cordials.)
- Distilled Spirits
- per proof liter
-
- Brandy 10.6¢ to 89.8¢
- Gin 13.2¢
- Liqueurs 13.2¢
- Rum 37¢
- Tequila 33¢ to 60 ¢
- Vodka 13.2¢ to 67.6¢
- Scotch 5.3¢
- Other whiskeys 6.6¢
- Wine per liter
- (33.814 fluid ounces)
-
- Sparkling 30.9¢
- Still 8.3¢ to 26.4¢
- Beer 1.6¢
-
- ANTIQUES produced prior Free
- to 100 years before date of
- entry are admitted duty-free.
- Have proof of antiquity
- obtained from seller.
-
- AUTOMOBILES
- Passenger 2.5%
-
- BAGS
- Hand, leather 5.3% to 10%
-
- BEADS
- Glass beads 8%
- Imitation precious and
- semi-precious stone
- (not glass) 6%
- Ivory* 4.7%
- BINOCULARS (PRISM), OPERA
- AND FIELD GLASSES Free
-
- BOOKS Free
-
- CAMERAS
- Motion picture 4.5%
- Still, over $10 each 3.0%
- Cases**, leather 8%
- Lenses, mounted 6.6%
-
- CANDY
- Sweetened chocolate bars 5.0%
- Other 7.0%
-
- CHESS SETS 4.64%
-
- CHINA, other than tableware
- Bone 6.6%
- Non-bone 2.5% to 9%
-
- CHINA TABLEWARE
- Bone 8%
- Non-bone, valued
- not over $56 per set 26%
- Non-bone, valued
- over $56 per set 8%
-
- CIGARETTE LIGHTERS
- Pocket 7.2% to 10%
- Table 4.8%
-
- CLOCKS
-
- Valued over $5 each 45¢ + 6.4%
-
- CRYSTAL 6% to 20%
-
- DOLLS
- Stuffed Check with Customs
- Other 12%
-
- DRAWINGS
- Done-by-hand Free
-
- FIGURINES, china 9%
- (By professional sculptor) 3.1%
-
- FILM
- Unexposed 3.7%
- Exposed Free
- ** Cases imported with camera are classifiable with the
- camera.
- * Ivory beads made from elephant ivory are prohibited. See
- page 22.
-
- FUR*
- Wearing apparel 5.8%
- Other 3.4%
-
- FURNITURE
- Wood chairs 3.4% to 5.3%
- Wood furniture
- other than chairs 2.5%
- Bentwood 6.6%
-
- GOLF BALLS 2.4%
-
- GLOVES
- Fur 5.8%
- Horsehide or cowhide 14%
-
- HANDKERCHIEFS,
- linen, hemmed 10.7%
-
- IVORY, manufactured 4.2%
- Note: May be prohibited as endangered species.
- See page 22.
-
- JADE
- Cut, but not set,
- suitable for jewelry 2.1%
- Other articles of jade 21%
-
- JEWELRY, precious metal
- Silver chief value, valued
- not over $18 a doz. 27.5%
- Other 6.5%
-
- LEATHER
- Flatgoods, wallets 4.7% to 8%
- Other manufactures of Free to 5.6%
-
- MUSIC BOXES 3.2%
-
- PAINTINGS, done entirely
- by hand Free
-
- PEARLS
- Loose or temporarily strung without clasp:
- Natural Free
- Cultured 2.1%
- Imitation 8%
- Permanently strung or
- temporarily strung, with
- clasp attached or separate 6.5% to 11%
-
- PERFUME** 5%
-
- POSTAGE STAMPS Free
-
- PRINTED MATTER Free to 5.3%
-
- RADIOS, solid state
- radio receivers 6%
-
- RECORDS
- (PHONOGRAPH) 3.7%
- * May be prohibited. See p. 22, Wildlife and Fish.
- ** Subject to federal excise tax of $3.566322 per liter.
-
- SHAVERS, ELECTRIC 4.4%
-
- SHELL ARTICLES* 3.4%
-
- SHOES, Leather 2.5% to 20%
-
- SKIS AND SKI EQUIPMENT 3.5% to 5.5%
-
- SOUND RECORDINGS Free
-
- STONES, Cut but not set
- Diamonds Free
- Others Free to 2.1%
-
- SWEATERS--wool 7.5% to 17%
-
- TAPE RECORDERS 3.9%
-
- TOYS 7%
-
- WATCHES
- Mechanical type (depending on jewels) plus
- Gold case 6.25 %
- Gold bracelet 14%
- Digital type 3.9 %
-
- WEARING APPAREL
- Cotton, not knit 3% to 32%
- Cotton, knit 7.9% to 21%
- Linen, not knit 3% to 12%
- Manmade fiber, knit 16.2% to 34.6%
- Manmade fiber, not
-
- knit 7.6% to 52.9¢/Kg. + 21%
- Silk, not knit 3% to 7.5%
-
- Wool, knit 6% to 77.2¢/Kg. + 20%
- Wool, not knit 9.8% to 30.4%
-
- WOOD, CARVINGS AND
- ARTICLES OF 5.1%
- * May be prohibited. See p. 22, Wildlife and Fish.
- NOTE: Duty rates are subject to change without notice by
- statute. For further information call your nearest Customs
- District office.
-
- Prohibited and Restricted Articles
-
- Because Customs inspectors are stationed at ports of entry
- and along our land and sea borders, they are often called upon
- to enforce laws and requirements of other Government agencies.
- For example, the Department of Agriculture is responsible for
- preventing the entry of injurious pest, plant, and animal
- diseases into the United States. The Customs officer cannot
- ignore the Agriculture requirements-the risk of costly damage
- to our crops, poultry and livestock industry is too great.
- Certain articles considered injurious or detrimental to
- the general welfare of the United States are prohibited entry
- by law. Among these are absinthe, liquor-filled candy (where
- prohibited by state law), lottery tickets, narcotics and
- dangerous drugs, obscene articles and publications, seditious
- and treasonable materials, hazardous articles (e.g., fireworks,
- dangerous toys, toxic or poisonous substances), and switchblade
- knives (however, a one-armed person may import a switchblade
- knife for personal use.)
- Other items must meet special requirements before they can
- be released. You will be given a receipt for any articles
- retained by Customs.
-
- Automobiles
-
- Automobiles imported into the United States must conform
- to Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) emission requirements
- and Department of Transportation (DOT) safety, bumper and theft
- prevention standards. Other than models required to meet theft
- prevention standards, vehicles may be entered conditionally to
- be brought into conformity. Automobiles that do not meet theft
- prevention standards will not be permitted entry into the
- United States, even under bond.
- Automobiles that do not meet EPA emission requirements can
- only be imported by holders of conformity certificates from
- EPA. These certificate holders are known as Independent
- Commercial Importers (ICI). Individuals contemplating
- purchasing a nonconforming vehicle should first make
- arrangements with an ICI for importing and modifying the
- vehicle to U.S. specifications.
- Vehicles that do not meet DOT safety and bumper standards
- must be imported by a DOT-registered party under a DOT bond of
- one and one-half times the value of the vehicle. Bonds may be
- difficult to obtain and can be expensive. Security deposits of
- 50% or more of the bond amount may be required.
- Vehicles that do not conform to either EPA or DOT
- standards must be imported by a company that is an ICI and
- DOT-registered party with a separate DOT bond for one and
- one-half times the value of the vehicle.
- Prospective purchasers should be aware that almost all
- automobiles purchased overseas are manufactured to European
- specifications and will require modification. Vehicles imported
- conditionally to be modified to U. S. specifications, and not
- modified, or not modified acceptably, must either be exported
- or destroyed under Customs supervision.
- Further information on importing vehicles may be obtained
- from the Environmental Protection Agency, Atm: EN-340F,
- Washington, D.C. 20460, telephone (202) 2602504, and the
- Department of Transportation, Office of Vehicle Safety
- Compliance (NEF 32), Washington, D.C. 20590. Copies of the
- Customs pamphlet Importing a Car and the EPA brochure Buying a
- Car Overseas? Beware! may be obtained by writing the U.S.
- Customs Service, P.O. Box 7407, Washington, D.C. 20044, or the
- Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C. 20460.
-
- Biological Materials
-
- Biological materials of public health or veterinary
- importance (disease organisms and vectors for research and
- educational purposes) require import permits. Write to the
- Foreign Quarantine Program, U.S. Public Health Service, Center
- for Disease Control, Atlanta, Ga. 30333.
-
- Books, Records, Computer Programs and Cassettes
-
- "Piratical" copies of copyrighted articles--unlawfully
- made articles produced without the authorization of the
- copyright owner--are prohibited from importation into the
- United States. Piratical copies will be seized and destroyed,
- unless the importer can demonstrate that he had no reasonable
- grounds for believing his actions violated the law. Then, they
- may only be returned to the country of export.
-
- Ceramic Tableware
-
- Some ceramic tableware sold abroad contains dangerous
- levels of lead in the glaze that can leach into certain foods
- and beverages served in them. The Food and Drug Administration
- recommends that ceramic tableware, especially when purchased in
- Mexico, the Peoples Republic of China, Hong Kong or India, be
- tested for lead release on your return or be used for
- decorative purposes only.
-
- Cultural Property
-
- An export certificate issued by certain Latin American
- countries may be required in order to import pre-Columbian
- monumental and architectural sculpture and murals, whether they
- are shipped directly or indirectly from the country of origin
- to the United States. Currently, there are also import
- restrictions on certain items from Peru, Bolivia, and El
- Salvador. Customs also enforces the Convention on Cultural
- Property Implementation Act. The regulations prohibit illicit
- traffic in cultural property while allowing the exchange of
- national treasures for legitimate scientific, educational, and
- cultural purposes. For further information, contact the United
- States Information Agency, Washington, D.C. (202)485-6612.
-
- Drug Paraphernalia
-
- The importation, exportation, manufacture, sale, and
- transportation of drug paraphernalia are prohibited. Persons
- convicted of these offenses are subject to fines and
- imprisonment. As importations contrary to law, drug
- paraphernalia may be seized by U.S. Custom.
-
- Firearms and Ammunition
-
- Firearms and ammunition are subject to restrictions and
- import permits approved by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
- Firearms (ATF). Applications to import may be made only by or
- through a licensed importer, dealer, or manufacturer. Weapons,
- ammunition, or other devices prohibited by the National
- Firearms Act will not be admitted into the United States unless
- specifically authorized by ATF.
- No import permit is required when it is proven that the
- firearms or ammunition were previously taken out of the United
- States by the person who is returning with such firearms or
- ammunition. To facilitate reentry, persons may have them
- registered before departing from the United States at any
- Customs office or ATF field office. However, not more than
- three nonautomatic firearms and 1,000 cartridges therefor, will
- be registered for any one person. Quantities beyond these are
- subject to the export licensing requirements of the Office of
- Munitions Control, Department of State, Washington, D.C. 20520.
- For further information, contact the Bureau of Alcohol,
- Tobacco and Firearms, Department of the Treasury, Washington,
- D.C. 20226; (202) 927-7977.
- Residents of the United States carrying firearms or
- ammunition with them to other countries should consult in
- advance the customs officials or the respective embassies of
- those countries as to their regulations.
-
- Food Products
-
- Bakery items and all cured cheeses are admissible. The
- USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service leaflet,
- Travelers Tips, provides detailed information on bringing food,
- plant, and animal products into the U.S. Imported foods are
- also subject to requirements of the Food and Drug
- Administration.
-
- Fruits and Vegetables
-
- Most fruits and vegetables are either prohibited from
- entering the country or require an import permit. Every fruit
- or vegetable must be declared to the Customs officer and must
- be presented for inspection, no matter how free of pests it
- appears to be. Most canned or processed items are admissible.
- Applications for import permits or requests for
- information should be addressed to Quarantines, USDA-APHIS-PPQ,
- Federal Bldg., Hyattsville, Md. 20782.
- Gold coins, medals, and bullion, formerly prohibited, may
- be brought into the United States, under regulations
- administered by the Office of Foreign Assets Control, except
- from Cuba, Vietnam, North Korea, Libya, Iraq, Haiti and Iran.
- Copies of gold coins are prohibited if not properly marked by
- country of issuance.
-
- Meats, Livestock, Poultry
-
- Meats, livestock, poultry, and their by-products (such as
- sausage, pate), are either prohibited or restricted from
- entering the United States, depending on the animal disease
- condition in country of origin. Fresh meat is generally
- prohibited from most countries. Canned meat is permitted if the
- inspector can determine that it is commercially canned, cooked
- in the container, hermetically sealed, and can be kept without
- refrigeration. Other canned, cured, or dried meat is severely
- restricted from most countries.
- All prohibited importations will be seized and destroyed
- unless the importer returns them immediately to their country
- of origin.
- You should contact USDA-APHIS-VS, Federal Building, 6505
- Belcrest Road, Hyattsville, Maryland 20782, for detailed
- requirements or call (301) 436-7885.
-
- Medicine/Narcotics
-
- Narcotics and dangerous drugs, including anabolic
- steroids, are prohibited entry and there are severe penalties
- if imported. A traveler requiring medicines containing
- habit-forming drugs or narcotics (e.g., cough medicines,
- diuretics, heart drugs, tranquilizers, sleeping pills,
- depressants, stimulants, etc.) should:
- * Have all drugs, medicinals, and similar products properly
- identified;
- * Carry only such quantity as might normally be carried by
- an individual having some sort of health problem;
- * Have either a prescription or written statement from your
- personal physician that the medicinals are being used
- under a doctor's direction and are necessary for your
- physical wellbeing while traveling.
-
- Warning
-
- The Food and Drug Administration prohibits the
- importation, by mail or in person, of fraudulent prescription
- and non-prescription drugs and medical devices. These may
- include unorthodox "cures" for medical conditions
including
- cancer, AIDS, and multiple sclerosis. While these drugs and
- devices may be completely legal elsewhere, they may not have
- been approved for use in the United States, even under a
- prescription issued by a foreign physician. They may not
- legally enter the United States and may be confiscated upon
- arrival by mail.
- For additional information, contact your nearest FDA
- office or write:
- Food and Drug Administration
- Import Operations Unit,
- Room 12-8 (HFC- 131)
- 5600 Fishers Lane
- Rockville, MD 20857
-
- Merchandise
-
- The importation of goods from the following countries is
- generally prohibited under regulations administered by the
- Office of Foreign Assets Control: Cuba, Vietnam, North Korea,
- Libya, Iraq, Haiti, and Iran.
- These proscriptions do not apply to informational
- materials such as pamphlets, books, tapes, films or recordings.
- On June 5, 1992, the President issued an Executive Order
- prohibiting the importation of goods from the Federal Republic
- of Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro).
- Specific licenses from the Office of Foreign Assets
- Control are required to bring prohibited merchandise into the
- United States; but they are rarely granted. Foreign visitors to
- the United States may be permitted to bring in small articles
- for personal use as accompanied baggage, depending upon the
- goods' country of origin. A limited number of specific licenses
- are being issued for articles assembled or processed in Haiti
- using parts or materials previously exported from the United
- States.
- Travelers should be aware that there are severe
- restrictions on travel and transportation transactions
- involving Libya and Iraq. Spending money on travel-related
- transactions involving Cuba, North Korea, and Vietnam is
- closely controlled and monitored. Because of the strict
- enforcement of prohibitions, anyone considering travel to any
- of the countries listed above should contact the Office of
- Foreign Assets Control, Department of the Treasury, 1500
- Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20220 or call
- 202/622-2520.
-
- Money and Other Monetary Instruments
-
- There is no limitation in terms of total amount of
- monetary instruments which may be brought into or taken out of
- the United States nor is it illegal to do so. However, if you
- transport or cause to be transported (including by mail or
- other means) more than $10,000 in monetary instruments on any
- occasion into or out of the United States, or if you receive
- more than that amount, you must file a report (Customs Form
- 4790) with U.$. Customs (Currency & Foreign Transactions
- Reporting Act, 31 U.S.C. 1101, et seq.). Failure to comply can
- result in civil and criminal penalties. Monetary instruments
- include U.S. or foreign coin in current circulation, currency,
- traveler's checks in any form, money orders, and negotiable
- instruments or investment securities in bearer form.
-
- Pets
-
- There are controls, restrictions, and prohibitions on
- entry of animals, birds, turtles, wildlife, and endangered
- species. Cats and dogs must be free of evidence of diseases
- communicable to man. Vaccination against rabies is not required
- for cats and dogs arriving from rabies-free countries.
- Personally owned pet birds may be entered (limit of two if of
- the psittacine family), but APHIS and Public Health Service
- requirements must be met, including quarantine at any APHIS
- facility at specified locations, at the owner's expense.
- Advance reservations are required. Non-human primates, such as
- monkeys, apes and similar animals, may not be imported. If you
- plan to take your pet abroad or import one on your return,
- obtain a copy of our leaflet, Pets, Wildlife, U.S. Customs.
-
- You should check with state, county and municipal
- authorities about any restrictions and prohibitions they may
- have before importing a pet.
-
- Plants
-
- Plants, cuttings, seeds, unprocessed plant products and
- certain endangered species either require an import permit or
- are prohibited from entering the United States. Endangered or
- threatened species of plants and plant products, if importation
- is not prohibited, will require an export permit from the
- country of origin. Every single plant or plant product must be
- declared to the Customs officer and must be presented for
- inspection, no matter how free of pests it appears to be.
- Applications for import permits or requests for information
- should be addressed to: Quarantines, USDA-APHIS-PPQ, Federal
- Building, 6505 Belcrest Road, Hyattsville, Md. 20782.
-
- Textiles
-
- Textile and apparel items which accompany you and which
- you have acquired abroad for personal use or as gifts are
- generally not subject to quantitative restrictions. However,
- unaccompanied textile and apparel items may be subject to
- certain quantitative restrictions (quotas) which require a
- document called a "visa" or "export license"
or exempt
- certificate as appropriate from the country of production.
- Check with Customs before you depart on your trip.
-
- Trademarked Articles
-
- Foreign-made trademarked articles may be limited as to the
- quantity which may be brought into the United States if the
- registered trademark has been recorded by an American trademark
- owner with U.S. Customs.
- The types of articles usually of interest to tourists are
- 1) lenses, cameras, binoculars, optical goods; 2) tape
- recorders, musical instruments; 3) jewelry, precious metal-ware;
- 4) perfumery; 5) watches, clocks.
- Persons arriving in the United States with a trademarked
- article are allowed an exemption, usually one article of a type
- bearing a protected trademark. An exempted trademark article
- must accompany you, and you can claim this exemption for the
- same type of article only once each 30 days. The article must
- be for your personal use and not for sale. If an exempted
- article is sold within one year following importation, the
- article or its value is subject to forfeiture.
- If the trademark owner allows a quantity in excess of the
- aforementioned exemption for its particular trademarked
- article, the total of those trademarked articles authorized may
- be entered. Articles beating counterfeit trademarks, if the
- amount of such articles exceeds the traveler's personal
- exemption, are subject to seizure and forfeiture
-
- Wildlife and Fish
-
- Wildlife and fish are subject to certain import and export
- restrictions, prohibitions, permits or certificates, and
- quarantine requirements. This includes:
- * Wild birds, mammals including marine mammals, reptiles,
- crustaceans, fish, and mollusks.
- * Any part or product, such as skins, feathers, eggs.
- * Products and articles manufactured from wildlife and fish.
- Endangered species of wildlife and products made from them
- are prohibited from being imported or exported. All ivory and
- ivory products--except antiques--made from elephant ivory are
- prohibited. Ivory antiques may be imported provided they can be
- documented as being 100 years old. (Certain other requirements
- for antiques may apply.) If you contemplate purchasing articles
- made from wildlife, such as tortoise shell jewelry, leather
- goods, or other articles made from whalebone, ivory, skins, or
- fur, please contact--before you go--the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
- Service, Department of the Interior, Washington, D.C. 20240
- which also 'prescribes the limits on migratory game birds,
- prior to each hunting season. Ask for their pamphlet "Fish
and
- Wildlife."
- If you plan to import fish or wildlife, or any product,
- article or part, check with Customs or Fish and Wildlife
- Service first, as only certain ports are designated to handle
- these entries. Additional information is contained in our
- leaflet Pets, Wildlife, U.S. Customs.
- Federal regulations do not authorize the importation of
- any wildlife or fish into any state of the United States if the
- state's laws or regulations are more restrictive than any
- applicable Federal treatment. Wild animals taken, killed, sold,
- possessed, or exported to the United States in violation of any
- foreign laws are not allowed entry into the United States.
-
- Customs Pointers
-
- Traveling Back and Forth Across Border
-
- After you have crossed the United States boundary at one
- point and you swing back into the United States to travel to
- another point in the foreign country, you run the risk of
- losing your customs exemption unless you meet certain
- requirements. If you make a "swing back" don't risk
your
- exemptions--ask the nearest Customs officer about these
- requirements.
-
- "Duty-Free" Shops
-
- Articles bought in "duty-free" shops in foreign
countries
- are subject to U.S. customs duty and restrictions but may be
- included in your personal exemption.
- Articles purchased in U.S. "duty-free" shops are
subject
- to U.S. customs duty if reentered into the U.S. Example: Liquor
- bought in a "duty-free" shop before entering Canada
and brought
- back into the United States will be subject to duty and
- internal revenue tax.
- Note: Many travelers are confused by the term
"duty-free"
- as it relates to shops. Articles sold in duty-free shops are
- free of duty and taxes only for the country in which that shop
- is located. Articles sold in duty-free shops are intended for
- export and are not to be returned to the country of purchase.
- Thus, for example, if you were to buy a Hermes scarf in Orly
- Airport's duty-free shop, the price you pay will not include
- the tax you would have to pay if you bought that same scarf at
- Hermes in Faubourg St. Honore. So if your purchases exceed your
- personal exemption, that scarf may not be duty free for you.
-
- Keep Your Sales Slips
-
- You will find your sales slips, invoices, or other
- evidence of purchase not only helpful when making out your
- declaration, but necessary if you have unaccompanied articles
- being sent from the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Guam
- or any of the Caribbean Basin Countries listed p. 6.
-
- Packing Your Baggage
-
- Pack your baggage in a manner that will make inspection
- easy. Do your best to pack separately the articles you have
- acquired abroad. When the Customs officer asks you to open your
- luggage or the trunk of your car, please do so without
- hesitation.
-
- Photographic Film
-
- All imported photographic films, which accompany a
- traveler, if not for commercial purpose, may be released
- without examination by Customs unless there is reason to
- believe they contain objectionable matter.
- Films prohibited from entry are those that contain obscene
- matter, advocate treason or insurrection against the United
- States, advocate forcible resistance to any law of the United
- States, or those that threaten the life of or infliction of
- bodily harm upon any person in the United States.
- Developed or undeveloped U.S. film exposed abroad (except
- motion-picture film to be used for commercial purposes) may
- enter free of duty and need not be included in your customs
- exemption.
- Foreign film purchased abroad and prints made abroad are
- dutiable but may be included in your customs exemption.
-
- Shipping Hints
-
- Merchandise-acquired abroad may be sent home by you or by
- the store where purchased. As these items do not accompany you
- on your return, they cannot be included in your customs
- exemption and are subject to duty when received in the United
- States. Duty cannot be prepaid. There are, however, special
- procedures to follow for merchandise acquired in and sent from
- the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Guam or Caribbean
- Basin countries. See page 6.
- All incoming shipments must be cleared through U.S.
- Customs. Customs employees cannot, by law, perform entry tasks
- for the importing public, but they will advise and give
- information to importers about customs requirements.
- Customs collects customs duty (if any) as provided for in
- the tariff schedule, certain Internal Revenue taxes and several
- user fees amounting to less than one percent of the value. Any
- other charges paid on import shipments are for handling by
- freight forwarders, commercial brokers, or for other delivery
- services. Some carriers may add other clearance charges that
- have nothing to do with Customs duties.
- Note: Custombrokers are not U.S. Customs employees. Fees
- charged by the brokers are based on the amount of work done,
- not on the value of the personal effects or of the tourist
- purchase you shipped. The fee may seem excessive to you in
- relation to the value of the shipment. The National Customs
- Brokers & Forwarders Association is well aware of the
- difficulties and excessive expense incurred by tourists
- shipping items home. Their advice is "Ship the easy
way--take
- it with you in your baggage or send it by parcel post
prepaid."
- Mail Shipments (including parcel post) have proven to be
- more convenient and less costly for travelers. Parcels must
- meet the mail requirements of the exporting country as to
- weight, size, or measurement.
- The U.S. Postal Service sends all incoming foreign mail
- shipments to Customs for examination. Packages free of customs
- duty are returned to the Postal Service for delivery to you by
- your home post office without additional postage, handling
- costs, or other fees.
- For packages containing dutiable articles, the Customs
- officer will attach a mail entry showing the amount of duty to
- be paid and return the parcel to the Postal Service. The duty
- and a postal handling fee will be collected when the package is
- delivered. In addition, there is a $5 Customs processing fee on
- dutiable packages.
- Formal entry may be required for some shipments (some
- textiles, wearing apparel and small leather goods) regardless
- of value. Customs employees cannot prepare this type of entry
- for you. Only you or a licensed customs broker may prepare a
- formal entry.
- If you pay the duty on a package but feel that the duty
- was not correct, you may file a protest. This protest can be
- acted on only by the Customs office which issued the mail entry
- receipt--Customs Form 3419--attached to your package. Send a
- copy of this form with your protest letter to the Customs
- office at the location and address shown on the left side of
- the form. That office will review the duty assessment based on
- the information furnished in your letter and, if appropriate,
- authorize a refund.
- Another procedure would be to not accept the parcel. You
- would then have to provide, within 30 days, a written statement
- of your objections to the Postmaster where the parcel is being
- held. Your letter will be forwarded to the issuing Customs
- office. The shipment will be detained at the post office until
- a reply is received.
- Express shipments may be sent to the United States from
- Canada and Mexico and by air freight from other countries. The
- express company usually provides or arranges for customs
- clearance of the merchandise for you. A fee is charged for this
- service.
- Freight shipments, whether or not they are free of duty at
- the time of importation, must clear Customs at the first port
- of arrival into the United States, or, if you choose, the
- merchandise may be forwarded in Customs custody (in bond) from
- the port of arrival to another Customs port of entry for
- customs clearance.
- All arrangements for customs clearance and forwarding in
- bond must be made by you or someone you designate to act for
- you. Frequently, a freight forwarder in a foreign country will
- handle all the necessary arrangements, including the clearance
- through Customs in the United States by a customs broker. A fee
- is charged for this service. This fee is not a Customs charge.
- If a foreign seller consigns a shipment to a broker or agent in
- the United States, the freight charge is usually paid only to
- the first port of arrival in the United States. This means
- there will be additional inland transportation or freight
- forwarding charges, brokers' fees, insurance, and other items.
- An individual may also effect the customs clearance of a
- single, noncommercial shipment not requiring formal entry for
- you, if it is not possible for you to personally secure the
- release of the goods. You must authorize and empower the
- individual in writing to execute the customs declaration and
- the entry for you as your unpaid agent. The written authority
- provided to the individual should be addressed to the
"Officer
- in Charge of Customs" at the port of entry.
- Unaccompanied tourist purchases acquired in and sent
- directly from the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Guam, or
- a Caribbean Basin country, may be entered, if properly declared
- and processed, as follows:
- * Up to $1200 free of duty under your personal exemption if
- from an insular possession; $600 if from a Caribbean Basin
- country. Remember that if up to $400 of this amount was
- acquired elsewhere than these countries, those articles
- must accompany you at the time of your return in order to
- claim duty-free entry under your personal exemption.
- * An additional $1,000 worth of articles, dutiable at a flat
- five percent rate if from an insular possession, or a fiat
- 10 percent rate (based on the fair retail value in the
- country where purchased) if the merchandise is from a
- Caribbean Basin country.
- * Any amount over the above, dutiable at various rates of
- duty.
- The procedure outlined below must be followed:
- Step 1. You will: a) list all articles acquired abroad on
- your baggage declaration (Customs Form 6059B) except those sent
- under the $50 or the $100 bona fide gift provision described on
- p. 7 to friends and relatives in the U.S.; b)indicate which
- articles are unaccompanied; c) fill out a Declaration of
- Unaccompanied Articles (Customs Form 255) for each package or
- container to be sent. This form may be obtained when you clear
- Customs if it was not available where you made your purchase.
- Step 2. Customs at the time of your return will: a)
- collect duty and tax if owed on goods accompanying you; b)
- verify your unaccompanied articles against sales slips,
- invoices, etc.; c) validate Form 255 as to whether goods are
- free of duty under your personal exemption or subject to a flat
- rate of duty. Two copies of the three-part form will be returned
- to you.
- Step 3. You will return the yellow copy of the form to the
- shopkeeper (or vendor) holding your purchase and keep the other
- copy for your records. You are responsible for advising the
- shopkeeper at the time you make your purchase that your package
- is not to be sent until this form is received.
- Step 4. The shopkeeper will place the form in an envelope
- and attach the envelope securely to the outside of the package
- or container, which must be clearly marked "Unaccompanied
- Tourist Purchase." Please note that a form must be placed
on
- each box or container. This is the most important step to be
- followed in order for you to receive the benefits allowed under
- this procedure.
- Step 5. The Postal Service will deliver the package, if
- sent by mail, to you after Customs clearance. Any duty owed
- will be collected by the Postal Service plus a postal handling
- fee; or
- You will be notified by the carrier as to the arrival of
- your shipment at which time you will go to the Customs office
- processing your shipment and make entry. Any duty or tax owed
- will be paid at that time. You may employ a customs broker to
- do this for you. A fee will be charged by the broker.
- Storage charges. Freight and express packages delivered
- before you return (without prior arrangements for acceptance)
- will be placed in storage by Customs after five days, at the
- expense and risk of the owner. If not claimed within one year,
- the items will be sold.
- Mail parcels not claimed within 30 days will be returned
- to the sender unless a duty assessment is being protested.
-
- Notice to California Residents:
-
- California residents should know that merchandise
- purchased abroad and brought back to California may be subject
- to a "use tax." On October 1, 1990, California began
to assess
- a use tax on these purchases, using information from Customs
- declarations completed by returning travelers at ports of
- entry. The use-tax rate is the same as the sales-tax rate in
- the traveler's California county of residence.
- For more information about the use-tax program, contact
- the California Board of Equalization's Occasional Sales Use Tax
- Unit, (916) 445-9524.
-
- For Further Information
-
- Every effort has been made to indicate essential
- requirements; however, all regulations of Customs and other
- agencies cannot be covered in full.
- Customs offices will be glad to advise you of any changes
- in regulations which may have occurred since publication of
- this leaflet.
- District Directors of Customs are located in the following
- cities:
- Anchorage, Alaska 99501 ...................907/271-2675
- Baltimore, Md. 21202 ......................301/962-2666
- Boston, Mass. 02222-1059 ..................617/565-6147
- Buffalo, N.Y. 14202 .......................716/846-4373
- Charleston, S.C. 29402 ....................803/724-4312
- Charlotte, N.C. 28219 .....................704/329-0770
- Charlotte Arealie;
- St. Thomas-V.I. 00801 .....................809/774-2530
- Chicago, Ill. 60607 .......................312/353-6100
- Cleveland, Ohio 44114 .....................216/522-4284
- Dallas/Ft. Worth, Tex. 75261 ..............214/574-2170
- Detroit, Mich. 48226-2568 .................313/226-3177
- Duluth, Minnesota 55802-1390 ..............218/720-5201
- El Paso, Texas 79985 ......................915/540-5800
- Great Falls, Montana 59405 ................406/453-7631
- Honolulu, Hawaii 96806 ....................808/541-1725
- Houston, Texas 77029 ......................713/671-1000
- Laredo, Texas 78041-3130 ................. 512/726-2267
- Los Angeles/Long Beach, Ca. 90731 ........ 310/514-6001
- Miami, Florida 33131 ..................... 305/536-5791
- Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53237-0260 ...........414/297-3925
- Minneapolis, Minnesota 55401 ..............612/348-1690
- Mobile, Alabama 36602 .....................205/690-2106
- New Orleans, Louisiana 70130 ..............504/589-6353
- New York, New York
- New York Seaport Area
- New York, New York 10048 .............212/466-5817
- Kennedy Airport Area,
- Jamaica, New York 11430 ..............718/917-1542
- Newark Area,
- Newark, New Jersey 07114 .............201/645-3760
- Nogales, Arizona 85621 ....................602/761-2010
- Norfolk, Virginia 23510 ...................804/441-6546
- Ogdensburg, New York 13669 ................315/393-0660
- Pembina, North Dakota 58271 ...............701/825-6201
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106 ..........215/597-4605
- Port Arthur, Texas 77642 ..................409/724-0087
- Portland, Maine 04112 .....................207/780-3326
- Portland, Oregon 97209 ....................503/326-2865
- Providence, Rhode Island 02905 ............401/528-5080
- St. Albans, Vermont 05478 .................802/524-1521
- St. Louis, Missouri 63105 .................314/425-3134
- San Diego, California 92188 ...............619/557-5455
- San Francisco, California 94126 ...........415/465-4340
- San Juan, Puerto Rico 00901 ...............809/729-6950
- Savannah, Georgia 31401 ...................912/652-4256
- Seattle, Washington 98174 .................206/442-0554
- Tampa, Florida 33605 ......................813/228-2381
- Washington, D.C. 20041
- Washington Dulles Intl. Airport
- Chantlily, Va. 22021 .................703/318-5900
-
- Preclearance Offices
-
- Montreal ..................................514/636-3859
- Toronto ...................................416/676-3399
- Winnipeg ..................................204/783-2206
- Calgary ...................................403/221-1733
- Edmonton ..................................403/890-4514
- Vancouver .................................604/278-1825
- Bermuda ...................................809/291-2560
- Nassau ....................................809/327-8461
- Freeport ..................................809/352-7256
- Customs Assistance Abroad. Should you need Customs
- assistance while abroad, you can visit or telephone our
- representatives located at the American Embassy or consulate
- in...
- Bangkok ...................................662/252-5040
- Bonn ...................................49/228/339-2207
- The Hague. ...............................31/70/924-651
- Hermosillo ................................52/621-75258
- Hong Kong ................................852/5/214-552
- London ...................................44/1/499-9000
- Merida ....................................52/99/258235
- Mexico City .............................(525) 211-0042
- Milan ...................................39/2/29035-218
- Monterrey ................................52/83/42-7972
- Montevideo ................................598/223-6061
- Ottawa ..................................(613) 238-5335
- Panama City ................................507/257-562
- Paris ...................................33/1/4296-1202
- Rome ....................................39/6/4674-2475
- Seoul .....................................822/732-2601
- Singapore ..................................65/338-0251
- Tokyo ...................................81/3/3224-5433
- Vienna .................................43/222/31-55-11
- Ask for the U.S. Customs Service.
- Frequently, We Are Asked Questions which are not Customs
- matters. If you want to know about...
- Passports. Contact the Passport Agency nearest you at the
- following Zip Codes: Boston 02222-0123; Chicago 60604-1564;
- Honolulu 96850, Houston 77002-4874; Los Angeles 90024-36 14,
- Miami 33130-1680, New Orleans 70113-1931; New York 10111-0031;
- Philadelphia 19106-1684; San Francisco 94105-2773; Seattle
- 981741091; Stamford, CT 06901-2767; Washington, D.C.
- 20524-0002. Some Clerks of Court and Postal Clerks also accept
- passport applications.
- Baggage Allowance. Ask the airline or steamship line you
- are traveling on about this.
- Currency of Other Nations. Your local bank can be of
- assistance.
- Foreign Countries. For information about the country you
- will visit or about what articles may be taken into that
- country, contact the appropriate Embassy, consular office, or
- tourist information office.
- Report Drug Smuggling to U.S. Customs Service 1(800)BE-ALERT
- GPO: 1992 0 - 333-244 QL 3
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- U.S. CUSTOMS
- International Mail Imports
-
- Department of the Treasury
- Customs Publication No. 514
- Revised March 1994
-
- Introduction
-
- I've ordered commemorative plates from Europe before and
- never paid duty. Why did I have to pay duty this time ?
- I received a gift package from my aunt who was traveling
- abroad. Am I required to pay duty on a gift?
- I need to send a foreign-made watch to Switzerland for
- repair. Will I have to pay duty when it comes back?
- We get lots of questions like these, so we have prepared
- this leaflet to explain U.S. Customs procedures and
- requirements for parcels mailed to the United States from
- abroad. If you follow the suggestions offered here, you will
- get your packages through the customs process as efficiently as
- possible.
- The fastest way to inquire about a particular mail
- shipment is to communicate directly with the Customs
- international mail branch that processed your shipment. You
- will find these mail branches, as well as Customs district
- offices, starting on page 10 of this pamphlet. Should you need
- to contact Customs headquarters, you may write to: U.S. Customs
- Service, Office of Cargo Enforcement and Facilitation,
- Washington, D.C. 20229.
-
- Mail parcels must meet United States and international postal
- requirements regarding weight, size, and measurement.
-
- Contents
-
- Clearance and Delivery
- Missing or Lost Parcels
- Protest of Duty
- Duty Exemptions
- Articles from Insular Possessions
- Articles Damaged, Replaced or Returned for Repair
- Need for Proper Declaration
- Customs International Mail Branches
- Location of Customs Offices
-
- What mail is subject to Customs examination?
-
- In general, all mail originating outside the Customs
- territory of the United States (the 50 states, the District of
- Columbia, and Puerto Rico), which is to be delivered within
- U.S. Customs territory, is subject to Customs examination. All
- mail arriving from outside the U.S. Virgin Islands that is to
- be delivered inside the U.S. Virgin Islands is also subject to
- Customs examination. The U.S. Postal Service sends all incoming
- foreign mail packages to Customs for examination and assessment
- of any applicable duty. This includes international (civilian)
- mail parcels and those originating at overseas military postal
- facilities (APO/FPO).
-
- Free of Duty
-
- Packages that Customs has passed free of duty
- will be endorsed on the outer wrapper: "Passed Free--U.S.
- Customs." These packages receive minimal Customs handling
and
- are returned immediately to the Postal Service for delivery by
- the local post office. In these cases, there will be no
- additional postage, handling costs or other fees required of
- the addressee.
-
- Dutiable
-
- Packages that require payment of duty will have a Customs
- form CF 3419A attached to the outer wrapper. This form is the
- Customs mail entry, and it will have been filled out by the
- examining Customs officer indicating the tariff item number,
- rate of duty, processing fee, and total amount to be paid for
- that shipment.
- The package is then returned to the Postal Service for
- local delivery and collection of both duty and a postal
- handling fee, which is assessed by the Postal Service. Some
- mail importations valued at more than $1,250 will require a
- formal entry by the importer, rather than the procedure just
- described.
- The Postal Service fee will appear on the package in the
- form of postage-due stamps. This procedure has been authorized
- by international postal convention. An exception to this is
- made for dutiable material mailed from U.S. military post
- offices located abroad; in these cases, postal handling fees
- are not charged. A Customs processing fee of $5.00 will be
- assessed on all dutiable mail shipments.
-
- What happens to my parcel if it is not claimed?
-
- Mail parcels not claimed within 30 days will be returned
- to the sender unless a duty assessment is being protested.
-
- How do I locate a missing or overdue mail parcel?
-
- If your parcel is long overdue, or if you think it may be
- lost in the mail, you should contact your local post office and
- request that a parcel tracer action be initiated to locate it.
- This is a matter over which Customs has no control.
- If a parcel has been detained by Customs for a specific
- reason, such as the lack of a proper invoice, bill of sale, or
- other documentation; a possible trademark violation; or if a
- formal Customs entry is required, the Customs office holding
- your shipment will notify you immediately of the reason for
- detention and how you can obtain release of the shipment.
-
- How do I protest the Customs duty on my mail package?
-
- If you think the amount of duty has been assessed
- incorrectly, you may obtain a reconsideration of the duty in
- either of two ways:
- (1) Pay the assessed duty and take delivery of the
- merchandise. Then, send the yellow copy of the mail entry
- receipt, CF 3419A, which accompanied the parcel when it was
- delivered, to the issuing Customs office identified on the
- form. Include with the yellow copy a statement as to why you
- believe the assessment is incorrect and copies of any invoices,
- bills of sale, or other evidence you may have. Requests for an
- adjustment must be made within 90 days after you have received
- the package and paid the duty.
- (2) Decline to pay the duty and postpone acceptance of the
- shipment. Then, provide the postmaster, within five days of
- your refusal, a written statement of your objections to the
- duty assessment. The postmaster will forward your statement,
- along with the mail entry (form CF 3419A), any invoices, bills
- of sale, or other evidence you choose to furnish, to the
- international mail branch that issued the mail entry.
- The postmaster retains custody of the shipment until
- informed by the international mail branch of the disposition to
- be made of your protest. No postal storage charges will accrue
- during this period.
- If you are located near one of Customs' international mail
- branches, the postmaster may send the CF 3419A to that branch
- instead, along with your statement and evidence for
- reconsideration of duties or tariffs.
- If consideration of your protest results in a refund, the
- refund check must be made payable to the addressee shown on the
- mail entry.
-
- Will the same rate of duty apply on future shipments?
-
- The rate of duty assessed on a mail entry is not binding
- for future importations. A binding ruling on tariff
- classification may be obtained by writing to the Commissioner
- of Customs, Attn: Office of Regulations and Rulings,
- Washington, D.C. 20229.
-
- U.S. Postal Service Regulations prohibit sending alcoholic
- beverages through the mail (18 U.S.C. 1716(f)).
-
- Am I entitled to any exemptions from duty?
-
- Bona fide gifts.
-
- Bona fide, unsolicited gifts are allowed to enter duty
- free as long as their fair retail value does not exceed $50,
- and if the recipient does not receive more than $50 worth of
- such gifts in the same day. (See 19 CFR Section 10.152.) There
- is no duty exemption for shipments containing alcohol-based
- perfume, tobacco products or alcoholic beverages unless the
- entire shipment has a retail value of less than $5.00. On bona
- fide gifts sent to the United States from the U.S. Virgin
- Islands, Guam, and American Samoa, the limitation is $100 fair
- retail value. To qualify for a duty exemption under this
- provision, the gifts must be sent by persons already outside
- the United States to persons in the United States.
- The gift exemption does not apply to gifts mailed to
- oneself or mail-ordered from the United States. It also does
- not apply where two or more persons traveling abroad together
- mail home gifts to each other.
- Gifts intended for more than one person may be
- consolidated in the same package provided:
- * They are individually wrapped,
- * They are labeled with the name of the recipient, and
- * The value of each gift does not exceed $50 ($100 if sent
- from the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, or Guam).
- Following these simple instructions will insure quick
- Customs clearance of gift packages.
- Gift Packages, including consolidated gift packages,
- should be clearly marked on the outside of the package:
- "Unsolicited Gifts" with 1 ) the name of the donor, 2)
nature
- of the gifts, if there is more than one in a consolidated
- package, 3) the accurate fair retail value of each gift, 4) the
- name of each recipient.
- Here is an example of the correct way to mark a
- consolidated package:
-
- Christmas gifts:
-
- * To John Jones--One belt, $20; one box of candy, $5; one
- tie, $5.
- * To Bill Jones--two shirts, $25; one belt, $5; one pair of
- trousers, $15.
- Customs duty will be collected on all improperly marked
- consolidated packages and individual
- gifts worth more than $50.
- Should any single gift within a consolidated package
- exceed the $50 value limit, then all the gifts making up the
- consolidated package will be dutiable. Each gift shall be
- dutiable at the rate that would normally be assessed on it,
- unless the sender has not marked all gifts so that the quantity
- and value of each can be readily ascertained. In such a case,
- the duty rate shall be based on the highest rate of duty for
- any gift in the consolidated package.
- All foreign-made merchandise that enters the United
- States, whether new or used, is subject to duty.
-
- United States Products Returned.
-
- Articles which are the growth, manufacture, or product of
- the United States and have not been processed or enhanced in
- value while abroad are not subject to duty upon their return to
- the United States. Packages containing only products of the
- United States should be clearly marked on the outside wrapper
- "American Goods Returned."
-
- Personal and Household Effects.
-
- The personal and household effects of any person (military
- or civilian) employed by the United States Government are
- eligible for duty-free entry if that person is returning to the
- United States after completing an assignment of extended duty
- abroad. The articles must have been in the returnee's
- possession prior to departure for the United States. A sealed
- envelope containing a copy of the Government orders terminating
- the assignment must accompany the articles. This envelope
- should be attached securely to the outer wrapper of the parcel.
- The parcel should also be clearly marked on the outside,
- "Returned Personal Effects--Orders Enclosed."
- Articles ordered from military exchanges prior to
- departure for the United States and mailed from the exchange to
- a service member's home address after departure do not qualify
- under this exemption and are dutiable. Goods of foreign origin
- are subject to duty, even if purchased in military exchanges
- (PX, AAFEX, NEX).
-
- Will articles acquired while traveling abroad and mailed home
- be duty-free under my personal exemption?
-
- Travelers returning from abroad are allowed an exemption
- from Customs duty on $400 worth of foreign merchandise that
- accompanies them upon their return to the United States. Except
- as noted below under the $1,200 exemption, all merchandise to
- be entered under the traveler's personal exemption must
- accompany that individual when reentering the United States.
- Foreign-made articles purchased during a trip abroad and mailed
- home are subject to duty.
-
- $1,200 Exemption
-
- If you return directly or indirectly from the Virgin
- Islands of the U.S., American Samoa, or Guam, you may receive a
- Customs exemption of $1,200, based upon the fair retail value
- of the articles in the country where you acquired them. Of this
- $1,200, not more than $400 may be applied to merchandise not
- obtained in these islands. This duty-free exemption is
- increased to $600 if the merchandise was acquired in a
- Caribbean Basin Initiative beneficiary country (listed on page
- 13 of this pamphlet).
- Tourist purchases acquired in and sent directly from a
- U.S. insular possession to the United States may be entered
- free of duty under your $1,200 exemption if the items are
- properly declared and processed. Articles acquired elsewhere
- must accompany you at the time of your return for duty-free
- entry under your personal exemption.
- An additional $1,000 worth of articles acquired in these
- islands may also be sent to the United States as unaccompanied
- tourist purchases and entered at a flat 5% rate of duty. Any
- amount over this will be dutiable at the various rates of duty
- applicable to the articles.
-
- The procedures outlined below must be followed.
-
- Step 1. At the time of your return: a) list all articles
- acquired abroad on your baggage declaration (CF 6059B) except
- those sent under the bona fide gift provision to friends and
- relatives in the United States; b) indicate which articles are
- unaccompanied; c) fill out a Declaration of Unaccompanied
- Articles (CF 255) for each package you are sending. This
- three-part form should be available where you make your
- purchase; if it is not, ask for a copy when you clear U.S.
- Customs.
- Step 2. When you return to the United States, Customs
- will: a) collect duty and tax on goods accompanying you, if tax
- or duty is owed; b) verify your unaccompanied articles against
- sales slips, invoices, etc.; c) validate form 255 as to whether
- goods are free of duty under your personal exemption or subject
- to a flat rate of duty. Two copies of the 255 (a yellow and a
- white) will be returned to. you.
- Step 3. Return the yellow copy of the form to the
- shopkeeper or vendor holding your purchase and keep the other
- copy for your records. The traveler is responsible for
- informing the shopkeeper at the time of purchase not to send
- the merchandise until the shopkeeper has received this yellow
- copy.
- Step 4. The shopkeeper then puts the yellow copy of the
- 255 into an envelope and attaches the envelope securely to the
- outside of the package. The merchant must also label the
- package, on the outside wrapper near the envelope if possible,
- "Unaccompanied Tourist Purchase." NOTE: This is the
most
- important step to follow in order to receive the benefits
- allowed under this procedure.
- Step 5. The Postal Service will deliver your package after
- it has cleared Customs. The Postal Service will also collect
- any duty or other Customs fees that may be owed, along with
- package handling fees.
-
- Are articles from the U.S. insular possessions dutiable other
- than tourist purchases mailed to the U.S.?
-
- While the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and Guam
- are insular possessions of the United States, they are outside
- the Customs territory of the United States. Articles imported
- into the United States from these insular possessions are
- subject to duty. However, articles which are the growth or
- product of these islands, and articles which are manufactured
- or produced there, are duty free if they: 1) do not contain
- foreign materials to the value of more than 50 percent of the
- appraised value of the manufactured article, as determined by
- Customs, 2) come directly to the Customs territory of the
- United States from these islands, and 3) are not prohibited by
- quota limitations or otherwise.
-
- How do I return an article for repair or alteration?
-
- If you are sending foreign-made merchandise abroad for
- repairs or alterations, you should register the item with
- Customs before mailing it in order to avoid paying duty twice.
- (Foreign-made merchandise is dutiable when entering the United
- States unless the owner has demonstrated prior ownership, and
- foreign-made repairs may also be dutiable.) You can get a
- Certificate of Registration, Customs form 4455, for this
- purpose at any local Customs office.
- To export articles for repair, you should bring the
- merchandise to your nearest Customs office for certification,
- which simply means that the Customs officer will verify that
- the article(s) described on the 4455 form are indeed those
- being shipped abroad. After doing so, the Customs officer will
- complete the CF 4455 in duplicate and will enter the Date,
- Port, and his or her Signature on the forms. The officer will
- then give both forms to you.
- Enclose the original 4455 with the merchandise you are
- shipping abroad to facilitate Customs processing after the
- repaired merchandise has been mailed back to you. Keep the
- duplicate copy just in case something goes awry and you need to
- assure that you are liable only for duty on the repairs and not
- on the complete article. Also, be sure to instruct your foreign
- supplier to return the CF 4455 with the repaired article and to
- mark on the outside of the return package "Repaired/Altered
- Merchandise--CF 4455 Enclosed." Goods that have been
repaired
- or altered free of charge may still be subject to Customs duty
- depending upon the Customs officer's determination after
- examining the return shipment.
- The Customs Service has an arrangement with the U.S.
- Postal Service for those who live more than 20 miles from a
- Customs office. In such cases, you may bring your merchandise
- to the nearest post office, where the postmaster can certify
- the articles on the CF 4455 in the manner described above. It
- will still be necessary, however, to get copies CF 4455 from
- the Customs Service.
-
- How is a duty refund obtained on a damaged article
-
- Parcels in transit from abroad undergo much handling and
- processing by foreign and domestic post offices as well as by
- Customs. Customs has possession of a parcel for only a short
- time out of that entire period and has no control over the
- shipment during the remainder of its journey. If your parcel
- arrives so damaged that its contents are beyond repair, you may
- choose to simply abandon the shipment to the post office. If
- you do this and you have already paid the Customs duty, you
- should 'obtain a statement from the delivering post office that
- you have abandoned the shipment. Send a copy of that statement
- along with a copy of your mail entry receipt (CF 3419A) to the
- issuing Customs office shown on the front of the mail entry
- receipt and request a full refund of the duty and postal
- handling fee.
-
- Are replacement articles dutiable?
-
- Occasionally, merchandise from a foreign supplier is
- unsatisfactory; for example, it may be the wrong size, color,
- broken in transit, or simply not according to the order placed
- with the supplier. Recipients of these parcels generally return
- the item to the foreign firm and request a replacement free of
- charge.
- The replacement article is dutiable. You may, however,
- request a refund of duty on the original package--the
- unsatisfactory one--by writing to the Customs international
- mail branch that first issued the mail entry (CF 3419A) for the
- unsatisfactory shipment. This branch will be found on the front
- of form 3419A. When you write to the mail branch requesting a
- refund on the original package, you must include with your
- letter: 1) a copy of the original mail entry (CF 3419A) and 2)
- a statement or other evidence from the post office from which
- you mailed it back to the supplier showing that the first
- article was, in fact, returned. You should also enclose any
- supporting correspondence to or from the foreign supplier
- concerning the exchange. Upon receipt of this information, the
- issuing Customs international mail branch will review the
- transaction and issue you a refund of duty, if appropriate.
-
- Why are clear and complete Customs declarations so important?
-
- We realize that some of the foregoing paperwork
- requirements may sound cumbersome, but millions of parcels come
- through Customs international mail branches each year. Without
- readily accessible, easy-to-read Customs forms attached to the
- outer wrapping--especially forms 3419A and 4455--Customs
- officers would be forced to do time consuming, intrusive
- examinations of almost all packages, which would seriously
- delay the arrival of your merchandise.
- When items are mailed from abroad, responsibility for
- completing and attaching the Customs declaration lies with the
- foreign sender, who must provide a full, accurate description
- of the package's contents and value. Complete, accurate Customs
- declarations attached to the outside wrapping allows the vast
- majority to pass Customs unopened, allowing Customs officers to
- make accurate duty assessments based strictly on the
- information supplied in the "dec."
- These are the addresses and telephone numbers for Customs
- International Mail Branches:
-
- Mail Branch Location Telephone Number
-
- Anchorage, 605 West Fourth Ave. (907) 248-3373
- Alaska Room 205
- Anchorage, AK 99501
- Atlanta, Foreign Mail Division (404) 763-7602
- Georgia P.O. BOX 619050
- Hapeville, GA 30320
- Boston, U.S. Customs (617) 565-8635
- Massachusetts South Postal Annex,
- Room 1008, G.M.F.
- Boston, MA 02205
- Buffalo, 1200 William Street (716) 846-4319
- New York Buffalo, NY 14240
- Charlotte, Mail Branch Facility, (809) 774-2511
- Amalie Sugar Estate Post Office
- Charlotte Amalie,
- VI 00801
- Chicago, U.S. Customs Foreign (312) 353-6140
- Illinois Mail Unit
- 11600 West Irving Park
- Road A.M.F. O'Hare
- Chicago, IL 60666
- Dallas P.O. Box 619050 (214) 574-2128
- Texas 2300 West 32nd Street
- Dallas-Ft. Worth Airport
- Dallas, TX 75261
- Detroit, Foreign Mail Section (313) 226-3137
- Michigan 1401 West Fort Street
- Room 226, G.M.F.
- Detroit, MI 48233
- Honolulu, 3599 North Nimitz Highway (808) 442-9608
- Hawaii Honolulu, HI 96818
- Houston, Mail Facility (713) 233-3600
- Texas 2929 Air Freight Rd.
- Houston, TX 77032
-
- Los Angeles, 300 N. Los Angeles St. (213) 894-4749
- California Room B-202
- Los Angeles, CA 90012-3391
- Miami, Foreign Mail Branch (305) 536-4281
- Florida 1751 N.W. 79th Ave.
- Miami, FL 33126
- Minneapolis/ 180 East Kellog Boulevard (612) 290-3639
- St. Paul Room 506
- Minnesota St. Paul, MN 55401
- Newark, U.S. Customs (201) 714-6371
- New Jersey Foreign Mail Center
- (NYBFMCE) 80 County Road
- (SURFACE Jersey City, NJ 07097
- MAIL)
- New York, Mail Facility, Bldg. 250 (718) 553-1446
- New York J.F.K. Airport
- (AIR MAIL) Jamaica, NY 11430
- Oakland, 1675 7th Street (510) 273-7560
- California Oakland, California 94615
- Philadelphia 1000 Tinicum Island Road (809) 766-6006
- Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA 19153
- San Juan, G.P.O, Box 12800 (809) 766-6006
- Puerto Rico Hato Rey, PR 00936
- Seattle, 16601 Air Cargo Rd. (206) 553-5382
- Washington Seattle, WA 98158
- (AMF)
- Washington, 44715 Prentice Drive (703) 406-6499
- D.C. Sterling, VA 20101-9998
-
- District Directors of Customs are located in the following
- cities:
-
- Anchorage, Alaska 99501 907/271-2675
- Baltimore, Md. 21202 410/962-2666
- Boston, Mass. 0222-1059 617/565-6147
- Buffalo, N.Y. 14202 716/846-4373
- Charleston, S.C. 29401 803/727-4312
- Charlotte, N.C. 28219 704/329-0770
- Charlotte Amalie, V.I. 00801 809/774-2510
- Chicago, Ill. 60607 312/353-6100
- Cleveland, Ohio 44114 216/891-3800
- Dallas/Ft. Worth, Tex. 75261 214/574-2170
- Detroit, Mich. 48226-2568 313/226-3177
- Duluth, Minn. 55802-1390 218/720-5201
- El Paso, Tex. 79925 915/540-5800
- Great Falls, Mont. 59405 406/453-7631
- Honolulu, Hawaii 96806 808/541-1725
- Houston, Tex. 77029 713/671-1000
- Laredo, Tex. 78041-3130 210/726-2267
- Los Angeles, Ca. 90731 310/514-6001
- Miami, Fla. 33 102 305/876-6803
- Milwaukee, Wis. 53237-0260 414/297-3925
- Minneapolis, Minn. 55401 612/348-1690
- Mobile, Ala. 36602 205/441-5106
- New Orleans, La. 70130 504/589-6353
- *New York, N.Y. (Seaport) 10048 212/466-5817
- *New York, N.Y. (JFK) 11430 718/533-1542
- *Newark, N.J. 07 114 201/645-3760
- Nogales, Ariz. 85621 602/761-2010
- Norfolk, Va. 235 10 804/441-6546
- Ogdensburg, N.Y. 13669 315/393-0660
- Pembina, N.D. 58271 701/825-6201
- Philadelphia, Pa. 19106 215/597-4605
- Port Arthur, Tex. 77642 409/724-0087
- Portland, Maine 04112 207/780-3326
- Portland, Ore. 97209 503/326-2865
- Providence, R.I. 02905 401/528-5080
- St. Albans, Vt. 05478 802/524-6527
- St. Louis, Mo. 63134-3716 314/428-2662
- San Diego, Calif. 92101 619/557-5360
- San Francisco, Calif. 94126 415/705-4340
- San Juan, P.R. 00901 809/729-6950
- Savannah, Ca. 31401 912/652-4256
- Seattle, Wash. 98104 206/553-0554
- Tampa, Fla. 33605 813/228-2381
- Washington, D.C. 20166 703/318-5900
- * Write to Area Director of Customs.
-
- Should you need Customs assistance while abroad, you can
- telephone our representatives located in the following cities:
-
- Bangkok /662/252-5040
- Beijing /86-1-532-3831
- Bonn /49/228/339-2207
- Caracas /58-2-285-0037
- Central America (Miami) (305) 596-6479
- Hermosillo /52/621/7-5258
- Hong Kong /852/524-2267
- London /44/71-493-4599
- Merida /52/99/258235
- Mexico City /(905) 211-0042
- Milan /39/2/29035-218
- Monterrey /52/83/42-7972
- MonteVideo /598-223-6061
- Ottawa /(613) 230/2120
- Panama City /507/257-562
- Paris /33/1/4296-1202
- Rome /39/6/4674-2475
- Seoul /822/397-4644
- Singapore /65/338-0251
- The Hague /31-703-924-651
- Tokyo /81/3-3224-5433
- Vienna /43/1-310-5896
- or our preclearance operations in...
- Montreal /514-636-3859
- Toronto /905-676-3399
- Winnipeg /204-783-2206
- Calgary /403-221-1733
- Edmonton /403-890-4514
- Vancouver /604-278-1825
- Bermuda /809-293-2560
- Nassau /809-377-8461
- Freeport /809-352-7256
-
- Carribean Basin Initiative (CBI)
-
- The following countries and territories have been
- designated as beneficiary countries for purposes of the CBI:
- Antigua and Barbuda Honduras
- Aruba Jamaica
- Bahamas Montserrat
- Barbados Netherlands Antilles
- Belize Nicaragua
- Costa Rica Panama
- Dominica Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Dominican Republic Saint Lucia
- El Salvador Saint Vincent and the
- Grenada Grenadines
- Guatemala Trinidad and Tobago
- Guyana Virgin Islands, British
- Haiti
- The list of beneficiaries may change from time.
-
- Warning
-
- The Food and Drug Administration prohibits the
- importation, by mail or in person, of fraudulent prescription
- and non-prescription drugs and medical devices. These may
- include unorthodox "cures" for medical conditions
including
- cancer, AIDS and multiple sclerosis. While these drugs and
- devices may be completely legal elsewhere, they may not have
- been approved for use in the United States, even under a
- prescription issued by a foreign physician or under the
- supervision of a domestic physician. They may not legally enter
- the United States and may be confiscated upon arrival by mail.
- Ceramic tableware sold abroad may contain dangerous levels
- of lead in the glaze which may be extracted by acid foods and
- beverages. The Food and Drug Administration recommends that
- ceramic tableware, especially when purchased in Mexico, the
- Peoples Republic of China, Hong Kong or India, be tested for
- lead release by a commercial laboratory on your return or be
- used for decorative purposes only.
- For additional information, contact your nearest FDA
- office or write:
- Food and Drug Administration
- Division of Import Operations and Policy
- Room 12-30, (HFC-170)
- 5600 Fishers Lane
- Rockville, MD 20857
- The United States Customs Service is authorized by law to
- prohibit the importation of goods that violate U.S. registered
- intellectual property fights-namely, trademarks and copyrights.
- This authority extends to articles imported into the United
- States through the international mail system. Goods imported in
- violation of intellectual property rights are subject to
- seizure and forfeiture. In addition, Customs may assess a
- monetary penalty, based on the domestic value of the articles,
- against the importer. Examples of unlawful merchandise include:
- * Articles which bear counterfeit trademarks, such as
"fake"
- designer or brand-name clothing or watches.
- * Toys which are unlawful copies of copy fight-protected
- designs.
- * Unauthorized reproductions of certain sound recordings.
- The Customs Regulations governing intellectual property
- rights may be found in Title 19, Code of Federal Regulations,
- Part 133.
- There are other categories of merchandise whose
- importation into the United States also is restricted or
- prohibited. These categories of merchandise include certain
- foodstuffs; certain domesticated and wild animals; products
- made from endangered species; narcotics and certain weapons.
- The consequences of the attempted entry of restricted or
- prohibited merchandise vary according to which law the
- importation violates.
- The Customs Regulations governing these classes of
- merchandise may be found in Title 19, Code of Federal
- Regulations, Part 12.
- For additional information on the above restrictions,
- please contact the nearest U.S. Customs Service office or write
- to the U.S. Customs Service, Office of Regulations and Rulings,
- Washington, D.C. 20229. ATTN: Intellectual Property Rights
- Branch.
-
- Report Drug Smuggling to U.S. Customs Service 1 (800) BE-ALERT
- Department of the Treasury
- U.S. Customs Service
- Washington, DC 20229
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- United States Department of State
- Bureau of Consular Affairs
- Passports
- Applying for them the EASY WAY
-
-
- DEPARTMENT OF STATE PUBLICATION 10049
- Bureau of Consular Affairs
- Revised March 1993
-
- Applying for Your U.S. Passport
-
- The Department of State's Bureau of Consular Affairs has
- prepared this publication to assist you in applying for your
- U.S. passport. This guide will give you information on where to
- apply, how to apply, and the best time to apply.
-
- Other Than Passport Agencies, Where Can I Apply for a Passport?
-
- You can apply for a passport at many Federal and state
- courts, probate courts, and some post offices.
- Over 2500 courts and 900 post offices in the United States
- accept passport applications. Courts and post offices are
- usually more convenient because they are near your home or your
- place of business. You save time and money by not having to
- travel to one of the 13 major U.S. cries where passport
- agencies are located.
-
- When Do I Have to Apply in Person?
-
- You must always apply in person if you are 13 or older,
- and if you do not meet the requirements for applying by mail
- (see section "May I Apply for a Passport by Mail?").
- Usually, for children under 13, only a parent or legal
- guardian need appear to execute a passport application.
-
- What Do I Need to Do to Apply for a Passport at a Courthouse or
- Post Office?
-
- Go to a courthouse or post office authorized to accept
- passport applications and complete the DSP-11 application form,
- but do not sign it until instructed to do so.
- You must present:
-
- 1. PROOF OF U.S. CITIZENSHIP
-
- That is...
-
- * a previous U.S. passport, or
- * If you were born in the U.S., a certified copy of your
- birth certificate issued by the state, city, or county of
- your birth (a certified copy will have a registrar's
- raised, embossed, impressed, or multicolored seal and the
- date the certificate was filed with the registrar's
- office).
-
- If you have neither a passport nor a certified birth
- certificate...
-
- * bring a notice from the registrar of the state where you
- were born that no birth record exists;
- * also, bring as many as possible of the following: a
- baptismal certificate, hospital birth record, early
- census, school record, or family Bible record. (To be
- considered, these documents must show your full name and
- date and place of birth.);
- * also, bring a notarized affidavit completed by an older
- blood relative who has personal knowledge of your birth.
- * If you were born abroad, bring a Certificate of
- Naturalization, Certificate of Citizenship, Report of
- Birth Abroad of a U.S. Citizen, or a Certification of
- Birth (Form FS-545 or DS-1350). If you do not have these
- documents, check with the acceptance office agent for
- documents that can be used in their place.
-
- 2. TWO PHOTOGRAPHS
-
- * The photos must be recent (taken within the past six
- months), identical, 2x2 inches, and either color or
- black/white;
- * they must show a front view, full face, on a plain, light
- (white or off-white) background. (Vending machine
- photographs are not acceptable.)
-
- 3. PROOF OF IDENTITY
-
- That is...
-
- * a previous U.S. passport, a Certificate of Naturalization
- or Citizenship, a valid driver's license, government
- or military ID, or corporate ID.
-
- 4. FEES
-
- * $65 for a ten-year passport;
- * $40 for a five-year passport for persons under 18 (these
- amounts include a $10 execution fee.)
- Make your check or money order payable to Passport
- Services. Post offices (and passport agencies) accept cash, but
- courts are not required to do so.
-
- 5. SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER
-
- Although a Social Security number is not required for
- issuance of a passport, Section 603E of the Internal Revenue
- Code of 1986 requires passport applicants to provide this
- information. Passport Services will provide this information to
- the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) routinely. Any applicant who
- fails to provide the information is subject to a $500 penalty
- enforced by the IRS. All questions on this matter should be
- referred to the nearest IRS office.
-
- May I Apply for a Passport by Mail?
-
- Yes, if you already have a passport and that passport is
- your most recent passport, and it was issued within the past 12
- years, and if you were over 18 years old at the time it was
- issued.
- Ask the court, post office, or your travel agent for a
- DSP-82 "Application For Passport By Mail." Fill it
out, sign
- it, and date it.
-
- Attach to it:
-
- * your most recent passport;
- * two identical passport photographs (see previous section
- on passport photographs);
- * and a $55 fee; make your check or money order payable to
- Passport Services. (The $10 execution fee is waived for
- those eligible to apply by mail.) If your name has been
- changed, enclose the Court Order, Adoption Decree or
- Marriage Certificate, or Divorce Decree specifying another
- name for you to use. (Photocopies will not be accepted.)
- If your name has changed by any other means, you must
- apply in person.
- Mail the completed DSP-82 application and attachments to:
-
- National Passport Center
- P.O. Box 371971
- Pittsburgh, PA 15250-7971.
-
- Your previous passport will be returned to you with your
- new passport.
- If you need faster service, you can use an overnight
- delivery service. If the service of your choice will not
- deliver to a post office box, send it to:
-
- Mellon Bank
- Attn: Passport Supervisor 371971
- 3 Mellon Bank Center. Rm. 153-2723
- Pittsburgh. PA 15259-0001.
-
- Include the appropriate fee for overnight return of your
- passport.
- Note: If the passport has been mutilated, altered or
- damaged in any manner, you cannot apply by mail. You must apply
- in person and use Form DSP-11, present evidence of U.S.
- citizenship, and acceptable identification.
-
- When Should I Apply for a Passport?
-
- Apply for your passport several months in advance of your
- planned departure. If you will need visas from foreign
- embassies, allow additional time.
-
- What Happens to My Passport Application After I Submit It?
-
- If you apply at a passport acceptance facility, the day
- you apply your application will be forwarded to the passport
- agency that services the acceptance office, or, in the case of
- marl-in applications, they are forwarded to the National
- Passport Center.
- Applications are processed according to the departure date
- indicated on the application form. If you give no departure
- date, the passport agency will assume you are not planning any
- immediate travel. Your passport will be returned to you by mail
- at the address you provided on your application.
-
- What Should I Do if My Passport Is Lost or Stolen?
-
- If your passport is lost or stolen in the U.S., report the
- loss or theft in writing to Passport Services, 1425 K Street,
- N.W., Department of State, Washington, D.C. 20522-1705, or to
- the nearest passport agency. If you are abroad, report the loss
- immediately to local police authorities and contact the nearest
- U.S. embassy or consulate.
-
- What Else Should I Know About Passports?
-
- All persons, including newborn infants, are required to
- obtain passports in their own name.
- If you need to get a valid passport amended because of a
- name change, use Form DSP-19.
- Before traveling abroad, make a copy of the identification
- page to make it easier to get a new one should it be necessary.
- If you require additional visa pages before your passport
- expires, submit your passport with a signed request for extra
- pages to one of the passport agencies listed on the last page.
- (Please allow time for the processing of the request.) If you
- travel abroad frequently, you may request a 48-page passport at
- the time of application.
- Some countries require that your passport be valid at
- least 6 months beyond the dates of your trip. If your passport
- is expiring in less than the required validity, you will need
- to get a new one. Check with the nearest embassy or consulate
- of the countries you plan to visit to find out their entry
- requirements.
- In addition to foreign entry requirements, U.S. law must
- also be considered. With certain exceptions, it is against U.S.
- law to enter or leave the country without a valid passport.
- Generally for tourists, the exceptions refer to direct travel
- within U.S. territories or between North, South, or Central
- America (except Cuba).
- Note: If you mutilate or alter your U.S. passport, you may
- render it invalid and expose yourself to possible prosecution
- under the law (Section 1543 of Title 22 of the U.S. Code).
-
- What If I Need a Passport in a Hurry?
-
- If you are leaving on an emergency trip within five
- working days, apply in person at the nearest passport agency
- and present your tickets or travel itinerary from an airline,
- as well as the other required items. Or, apply at a court or
- post office and have the application sent to the passport
- agency through an overnight delivery service of your choice
- (you should include a selfaddressed, pre-paid envelope for the
- return of the passport). Be sure to include your dates of
- departure and travel plans on your application.
-
- PASSPORT AGENCIES
-
- Apply Early For Your Passport
-
- Boston Passport Agency
- Thomas P. O'Neill Fed. Bldg
- Rm. 247. 10 Causeway Street
- Boston, Massachusetts 02222
- Information: 617-565-6998*
- 617-565-6990
- Chicago Passport Agency
- Suite 380,
- Kluczynski Federal Office Bldg.
- 230 South Dearborn Street
- Chicago, Illinois 60604-1564
- Information: 312-353-7155
- Honolulu Passport Agency
- Room C-106, New Federal Bldg.
- 300 Ala Moana Blvd.
- Honolulu, Hawaii 96850
- Information: 808-541-1919
- 808-541-1918
- Houston Passport Agency
- Suite 11043,
- Mickey Leland Fed. Bldg.
- 1919 Smith Street
- Houston, Texas 77002
- Information: 713-653-3153
- Los Angeles Passport Agency
- Room 13100,
- 11000 Wilshire Blvd.
- Los Angeles, California 90024-3615
- Information: 213-575-7070
- Miami Passport Agency
- 3rd Floor, Claude Pepper
- Federal Office Bldg.
- 51 Southwest First Avenue
- Miami, Florida 33130-1680
- Information: 305-536-4681
- New Orleans Passport Agency
- Postal Service Building
- 701 Loyola Ave., Rm T-12005
- New Orleans, Louisiana 70113-1931
- Information: 504-589-6728*
- 504-589-6161/62
- New York Passport Agency
- Room 270, Rockefeller Center
- 630 Fifth Avenue
- New York, New York 10111-0031
- Information: 212-399-5290
- Philadelphia Passport Agency
- Room 4426. Federal Bldg.
- 600 Arch Street
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106-1684
- Information: 215-597-7480
- San Francisco Passport Agency
- Suite. 200,
- Tishman Speyer Bldg.
- 525 Market Street
- San Francisco, California 94105-2773
- Information: 415-744-4444 or 4010*
- Seattle Passport Agency
- Room 982, Federal Office Bldg.
- 915 Second Avenue
- Seattle, Washington 98174-1081
- Information: 205-220-7777*
- 205-220-7788
- Stamford Passport Agency
- One Landmark Square
- Broad and Atlantic Streets
- Stamford, Connecticut 06902-2767
- Information: 203-325-3530*
- Washington Passport Agency
- 1425 K Street N.W.
- Washington. D.C. 20522-1705
- Information: 202-547-0518*
- If you are applying by mail see the section "May I Apply
- for My Passport by Mail?" for proper mailing addresses. If
you
- have any questions about an application that was mailed, write
- or call:
-
- National Passport Center
- 31 Rochester Ave.
- Portsmouth, NH 003801-2900
- (603) 334-0500
-
- * This is a 24-hour information line that includes general
- passport information, passport agency location, and hours of
- operation and information regarding emergency passport services
- during non-working hours.
|
|
|
|
|
Steal
the winning formula from the top10 affiliate marketers on the
Internet
using this secret system.
|




Sell
Anything Click
Here
|