Remix.run Logo
lxgr 2 days ago

> the de minimis exemption changes only apply to commercial import

What exactly distinguishes a commercial import from a personal gift? How on Earth would the USPS adjudicate the difference?

timr 2 days ago | parent [-]

Well, I'm not a customs agent, but I'd imagine they do it in the same way they adjudicate anything else: inspection. Some things get through by chance, of course, but not at a rate you'd want to rely on if you're a business.

In particular, if I walk into a random post office and send a one-off shipment internationally, the paperwork, origin, packaging, manifest, etc. is vastly different than what, say, Temu was doing to ship a $10 widget to US consumers at scale.

The rule you're talking about is not new, so presumably they've figured it out.

lxgr 2 days ago | parent [-]

The $100 rule might not be new, but given that it was by far exceeded by the $800 de minimis exemption until now, it just didn’t matter.

timr 2 days ago | parent [-]

This has nothing to do with the value threshold. US customs had to know the difference between personal packages and commercial packages before the change.

You asked me what distinguishes a commercial package from a personal gift.

lxgr a day ago | parent [-]

> US customs had to know the difference between personal packages and commercial packages before the change.

Presumably for things like import restrictions (I could imagine somebody sending homemade cookies is treated differently than a large-scale food importer), but not for a decision on whether to charge or not levy duties though, right?