PeterA Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 I was sent the other day some glasses I forgot and left at my families home in the US. They were sent via D**. Paid in full at the time of shipping. Tracking shows clearing the customs in Thailand then being ready to ship to me at my home in Thailand. Then on the day of expected delivery, I get an email from D**, that they need more money for "services", to the tune of 1,025 THB. I thought extortion was illegal here? This is the 2nd time this shipper has asked for extra funds for services. As a consumer, do I have any rights or should I process this legally? Or suck it up as another screw job? Thanks 4 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JBChiangRai Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 What Incoterms did you pay for? usually a 3 letter code. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stoner Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 28 minutes ago, PeterA said: Or suck it up as another screw job? are you asking or telling ? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bbko Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 How is this extortion? Sounds more like a import duty/tax. There are ways to contest the fee; The recipients/consignees wishing to object to Customs valuation or request duty and tax exemption are required to follow the steps below: The consignee complete and submit Request Form (available at post offices and www.postalcustoms.com) along with the notification and relevant documents such as evidences for purchase and receipts to the designated post office. Duty and tax payment is not required at this stage. The post office hands over the parcel and all documents received to Customs Customs Service Division responsible for post informs the result of consideration to the relevant post office so that it could inform the consignee accordingly. The consignee may decide on one of the following options: Be informed of the result by Thailand Post and pick up the goods at the post office indicated in the notification Request to be informed of the result and pick up the goods at Parcel Screening and Examination Sub-division, Postal Customs Service Division, EMS Centre Building, Soi Chang Wattana 5, Chaengwattana Road, Laksi, Bangkok https://www.customs.go.th/list_strc_simple_neted.php?ini_content=individual_160503_03_160922_01&lang=en&top_menu=menu_homepage&left_menu=menu_individual_submenu_01_160421_02 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Tropicalevo Posted August 18, 2023 Popular Post Share Posted August 18, 2023 (edited) 39 minutes ago, PeterA said: I get an email from D**, that they need more money for "services", to the tune of 1,025 THB. They have been extorting from us here on Samui for at least 20 years. I (and some neighbours) have written to DHL in Bangkok and in Germany to no avail. DHL use agents. It is the agent that is the problem. For one parcel, I was instructed to go to Bangkok to to pay the duty. (No receipt.) We all refuse to use them now. Edited August 18, 2023 by Tropicalevo 3 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post neilrob Posted August 18, 2023 Popular Post Share Posted August 18, 2023 If you import items into Thailand you have to pay customs duty and VAT on them. You should expect this on an international shipment. This is what the shipper is asking you to pay, plus a small service fee to handle the transaction. This is not extortion but government taxes you pay on imports, particularly if you ship via an express service. If you ship by the post office, then taxes are normally waived below a certain value, but it would take a long time. What value did the person shipping the glasses to you declare for the shipment? Thai Customs will normally charge taxes on this plus on the shipping cost. You can get an itemised list of the charges from the shipper's web site if you look 3 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
VocalNeal Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 33 minutes ago, PeterA said: I was sent the other day some glasses I forgot and left at my families home in the US. They were sent via D**. Paid in full at the time of shipping. Tracking shows clearing the customs in Thailand then being ready to ship to me at my home in Thailand. Then on the day of expected delivery, I get an email from D**, that they need more money for "services", to the tune of 1,025 THB. I thought extortion was illegal here? This is the 2nd time this shipper has asked for extra funds for services. As a consumer, do I have any rights or should I process this legally? Or suck it up as another screw job? Thanks - Who did the customs clearance? That although office work it still costs. - When the shipper paid in full did that include customs duty, customs clearance fee etc. - The fact that customs where involved suggests that whatever it was attracted customs duty. Say 30% of the landed value + VAT. The parcel company with two words and beginning with F is worse. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Kwasaki Posted August 18, 2023 Popular Post Share Posted August 18, 2023 For the sake of 25 squid and no aggro just pay up and get ya glasses. 3 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Albaby Posted August 18, 2023 Popular Post Share Posted August 18, 2023 1 hour ago, PeterA said: I was sent the other day some glasses I forgot and left at my families home in the US. They were sent via D**. Paid in full at the time of shipping. Tracking shows clearing the customs in Thailand then being ready to ship to me at my home in Thailand. Then on the day of expected delivery, I get an email from D**, that they need more money for "services", to the tune of 1,025 THB. I thought extortion was illegal here? This is the 2nd time this shipper has asked for extra funds for services. As a consumer, do I have any rights or should I process this legally? Or suck it up as another screw job? Thanks Not much help atm, but for future reference. I use a company called Sa-Buy Express. The inspect the parcel and charge by weight which differs by classification, ie wine and clothes are charged differently. I assume that they collect on behalf of customs. Never had a problem. or been hit by a "fee". I note that they ship from USA. 1 1 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PeterA Posted August 18, 2023 Author Share Posted August 18, 2023 1 hour ago, JBChiangRai said: What Incoterms did you pay for? usually a 3 letter code. I don't know what that is. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post PeterA Posted August 18, 2023 Author Popular Post Share Posted August 18, 2023 1 hour ago, VocalNeal said: - Who did the customs clearance? That although office work it still costs. - When the shipper paid in full did that include customs duty, customs clearance fee etc. - The fact that customs where involved suggests that whatever it was attracted customs duty. Say 30% of the landed value + VAT. The parcel company with two words and beginning with F is worse. Anytime I have something shipped via D$L, it gets re-routed to customs a second time after arrival, and 3 out of 4 times, gets a duty or tax added. I am paying fees to D$L, not customs. I am also paying import-export duty, and Duty Tax receiver. When I use the post office, 1 out of 10 times. And. D$L says it is confidential, not to tell anyone. Ha! Wonder why? They are telling me the forms did not say for personal use. Prescription glasses are for something else? 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PeterA Posted August 18, 2023 Author Share Posted August 18, 2023 1 hour ago, neilrob said: If you import items into Thailand you have to pay customs duty and VAT on them. You should expect this on an international shipment. This is what the shipper is asking you to pay, plus a small service fee to handle the transaction. This is not extortion but government taxes you pay on imports, particularly if you ship via an express service. If you ship by the post office, then taxes are normally waived below a certain value, but it would take a long time. What value did the person shipping the glasses to you declare for the shipment? Thai Customs will normally charge taxes on this plus on the shipping cost. You can get an itemised list of the charges from the shipper's web site if you look My sister declared a value of $150 USD. She said DHL there told here to make it $200 for reasons unknown to me. 1 minute ago, PeterA said: Anytime I have something shipped via D$L, it gets re-routed to customs a second time after arrival, and 3 out of 4 times, gets a duty or tax added. I am paying fees to D$L, not customs. I am also paying import-export duty, and Duty Tax receiver. When I use the post office, 1 out of 10 times. And. D$L says it is confidential, not to tell anyone. Ha! Wonder why? They are telling me the forms did not say for personal use. Prescription glasses are for something else? 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PeterA Posted August 18, 2023 Author Share Posted August 18, 2023 1 hour ago, bbko said: How is this extortion? Sounds more like a import duty/tax. There are ways to contest the fee; The recipients/consignees wishing to object to Customs valuation or request duty and tax exemption are required to follow the steps below: The consignee complete and submit Request Form (available at post offices and www.postalcustoms.com) along with the notification and relevant documents such as evidences for purchase and receipts to the designated post office. Duty and tax payment is not required at this stage. The post office hands over the parcel and all documents received to Customs Customs Service Division responsible for post informs the result of consideration to the relevant post office so that it could inform the consignee accordingly. The consignee may decide on one of the following options: Be informed of the result by Thailand Post and pick up the goods at the post office indicated in the notification Request to be informed of the result and pick up the goods at Parcel Screening and Examination Sub-division, Postal Customs Service Division, EMS Centre Building, Soi Chang Wattana 5, Chaengwattana Road, Laksi, Bangkok https://www.customs.go.th/list_strc_simple_neted.php?ini_content=individual_160503_03_160922_01&lang=en&top_menu=menu_homepage&left_menu=menu_individual_submenu_01_160421_02 Glasses are two years old. No receipts. The post office does not have them, D$L does. 5 hour drive to fight with customs is not worth it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post proton Posted August 18, 2023 Popular Post Share Posted August 18, 2023 1 hour ago, neilrob said: If you import items into Thailand you have to pay customs duty and VAT on them. You should expect this on an international shipment. This is what the shipper is asking you to pay, plus a small service fee to handle the transaction. This is nextortion but government taxes you pay on imports, particularly if you ship via an express service. If you ship by the post office, then taxes are normally waived below a certain value, but it would take a long time. What value did the person shipping the glasses to you declare for the shipment? Thai Customs will normally charge taxes on this plus on the shipping cost. You can get an itemised list of the charges from the shipper's web site if you look Only on goods worth over 1600 baht 1 1 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
swerve Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 What is the best courier company to use for Thailand deliveries? Sounds like it is not D$L. I have used D$L in the past, and I know they are expensive. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mokwit Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 (edited) 2 hours ago, neilrob said: If you import items into Thailand you have to pay customs duty and VAT on them. You should expect this on an international shipment. This is what the shipper is asking you to pay, plus a small service fee to handle the transaction. This is not extortion but government taxes you pay on imports, particularly if you ship via an express service. If you ship by the post office, then taxes are normally waived below a certain value, but it would take a long time. What value did the person shipping the glasses to you declare for the shipment? Thai Customs will normally charge taxes on this plus on the shipping cost. You can get an itemised list of the charges from the shipper's web site if you look Nope. If you send thing normal post and it is dutiable you pay the correct duty applied by Thai Customs - I don't think I have been charged more than 30%, most things 15%. With couriers, especially rhymes with Hell, you pay way more. Edited August 18, 2023 by mokwit 1 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mokwit Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 2 hours ago, bbko said: How is this extortion? Sounds more like a import duty/tax. There are ways to contest the fee; The recipients/consignees wishing to object to Customs valuation or request duty and tax exemption are required to follow the steps below: The consignee complete and submit Request Form (available at post offices and www.postalcustoms.com) along with the notification and relevant documents such as evidences for purchase and receipts to the designated post office. Duty and tax payment is not required at this stage. The post office hands over the parcel and all documents received to Customs Customs Service Division responsible for post informs the result of consideration to the relevant post office so that it could inform the consignee accordingly. The consignee may decide on one of the following options: Be informed of the result by Thailand Post and pick up the goods at the post office indicated in the notification Request to be informed of the result and pick up the goods at Parcel Screening and Examination Sub-division, Postal Customs Service Division, EMS Centre Building, Soi Chang Wattana 5, Chaengwattana Road, Laksi, Bangkok https://www.customs.go.th/list_strc_simple_neted.php?ini_content=individual_160503_03_160922_01&lang=en&top_menu=menu_homepage&left_menu=menu_individual_submenu_01_160421_02 This is for duties applied by Customs themselves. Few avail themselves of this opportunity because if Thai Customs, who are the judge in the case, find you are wrong to claim i.e. thye duty was correctly applied they charge you 5x what they originally charged (this may have changed but it certainly was the case). 1 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JBChiangRai Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 1 hour ago, PeterA said: I don't know what that is. The Incoterms define who pays what, unless you signed up overseas for DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) then it's more likely the receiver is responsible for duty and duty admin charges by the import carrier. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
2baht Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 (edited) 3 hours ago, PeterA said: I thought extortion was illegal here? As is corruption and prostitution! ???? Edited August 18, 2023 by 2baht 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sammieuk1 Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 They have seen you coming with your own glasses ???? 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Liverpool Lou Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 2 hours ago, Albaby said: I use a company called Sa-Buy Express. The inspect the parcel and charge by weight which differs by classification, ie wine and clothes are charged differently. Thai Customs import duty/VAT is calculated on the CIF value and the category, not the weight. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Liverpool Lou Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 (edited) 2 hours ago, PeterA said: Glasses are two years old. No receipts. The age of imported items is irrelevant, as are receipts. If dutiable items are imported into Thailand, duty and VAT is payable on the CIF value as determined here. Edited August 18, 2023 by Liverpool Lou 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Liverpool Lou Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 1 hour ago, mokwit said: Nope. If you send thing normal post and it is dutiable you pay the correct duty applied by Thai Customs - I don't think I have been charged more than 30%, most things 15%. With couriers, especially rhymes with Hell, you pay way more. "With couriers, especially rhymes with Hell, you pay way more". Nope, that is incorrect. Duty applied by couriers carries the same rate as items imported by post and laid down by Thai Customs Dept. Couriers that collect the duty on behalf of the Customs Dept. are also permitted to add on their disbursement charge for collecting the duty and paying it to Customs. If the duty seems to be incorrect a re-assessment can be requested, then it is up to Customs to decide. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Liverpool Lou Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 (edited) 1 hour ago, mokwit said: if Thai Customs, who are the judge in the case, find you are wrong to claim i.e. thye duty was correctly applied they charge you 5x what they originally charged Complete nonsense, that is not what happens with correctly declared/valued items. Edited August 18, 2023 by Liverpool Lou 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Thaindrew Posted August 18, 2023 Popular Post Share Posted August 18, 2023 3 hours ago, neilrob said: If you import items into Thailand you have to pay customs duty and VAT on them. You should expect this on an international shipment. This is what the shipper is asking you to pay, plus a small service fee to handle the transaction. This is not extortion but government taxes you pay on imports, particularly if you ship via an express service. If you ship by the post office, then taxes are normally waived below a certain value, but it would take a long time. What value did the person shipping the glasses to you declare for the shipment? Thai Customs will normally charge taxes on this plus on the shipping cost. You can get an itemised list of the charges from the shipper's web site if you look how do Lazada get away with shipments from China with no duty or vat? 1 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mokwit Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 (edited) 13 minutes ago, Liverpool Lou said: Complete nonsense, that is not what happens with correctly declared/valued items. The 5x may have been changed because it was so unfair - I pointed out that might be dated. You are the person who was telling everyone how easy it was to reclaim incorrectly assessed duty - you then admitted you had never done it. Told us all you just 'phoned the hotline, explained how it was wrong and they sent you a cheque if I remember rightly. That doesn't sound like how things work in Thailand. So please tell us how you go about dealing with an incorrect assessment (I remember now I was charged 100% by Thai Customs, but that is unusual). there is a normal rate often 15-30% but the schedule for each category allows for up to 60 or even 100%. Edited August 18, 2023 by mokwit 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
retarius Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 Your family should have had the company classify the glasses as "prescription medical", then no taxes. At least I've never had any. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JBChiangRai Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 6 minutes ago, Thaindrew said: how do Lazada get away with shipments from China with no duty or vat? They ship from China with terms DDP 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mokwit Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 17 minutes ago, Liverpool Lou said: "With couriers, especially rhymes with Hell, you pay way more". Nope, that is incorrect. Duty applied by couriers carries the same rate as items imported by post and laid down by Thai Customs Dept. Couriers that collect the duty on behalf of the Customs Dept. are also permitted to add on their disbursement charge for collecting the duty and paying it to Customs. If the duty seems to be incorrect a re-assessment can be requested, then it is up to Customs to decide. The duty on the paperwork to customs may be the correct duty but you pay way more with a courier as people on this board regularly attest. It is a profit centre for them. It seems you have never imported anything via courier - I first got stung for 100% duty by them in 1995. With Thai customs, apart from one 100% charge it has never been more than 15-30%. 1 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Liverpool Lou Posted August 18, 2023 Share Posted August 18, 2023 Just now, mokwit said: The duty on the paperwork to customs may be the correct duty but you pay way more with a courier as people on this board regularly attest. It is a profit centre for them. It seems you have never imported anything via courier Nonsense, if the duty seems to be too high on items imported by courier or post, it can be appealed and the Customs Dept will re-assess it. I have imported many items and have also had a re-assessment done on an item that came in via Thailand Post. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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