Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

I recently ordered a complete bike from Italy .Only paid VAT and some courier costs on this side .Even with costs ,the item was 25 K cheaper than here and actually in stock  in my choice .Shimano components  

  • Replies 794
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted
7 hours ago, eala said:

I recently ordered a complete bike from Italy .Only paid VAT and some courier costs on this side .Even with costs ,the item was 25 K cheaper than here and actually in stock  in my choice .Shimano components  

You got lucky.

If you said it was Campagnolo components and an Italian frame, all made in Europe, then a EUR1 certificate would make it exempt from duties.

Posted
10 hours ago, Frosty said:

You got lucky.

If you said it was Campagnolo components and an Italian frame, all made in Europe, then a EUR1 certificate would make it exempt from duties.

They subtracted the VAT on their side and i paid on this side .Really painless .Do you mean Italian made would be more or less expensive than here ?

Posted
51 minutes ago, eala said:

They subtracted the VAT on their side and i paid on this side. Really painless. Do you mean Italian made would be more or less expensive than here?

No, never said or implied that.

Bicycles (fully assembled) are subject to 15% duties, unless 100% made in the EU, EFTA (European Free Trade) or SADC region. It is 11.25% duties from MERCOSUR (South America) region.

  • 10 months later...
Posted
On 5/10/2021 at 9:28 PM, Frosty said:

Duties are based on the country of origin and not where it is ordered, eg. Made in China but shipped from CRC (EU).

 

A bicycle made in Europe, with a EUR1 certificate of origin, will not be liable for duties. However, many components might be made in the East (eg. groupset) but the frame is made in, say Italy, then it will be liable for duties.

 

Below is the tariff heading for bicycles.

8712.00

fe1f42d1b1c92397193cf6015a66691c.jpg

 

As you can see, the parts are all duty free, so is always safer to go the component route and build it here.

488378aa1438e2ab82c151217746e4f0.jpg

 

You can get the full tariff book here:

 

https://www.sars.gov.za/wp-content/uploads/Legal/SCEA1964/LAPD-LPrim-Tariff-2012-04-Schedule-No-1-Part-1-Chapters-1-to-99.pdf

Update Aug 2024:  https://www.sars.gov.za/wp-content/uploads/Legal/SCEA1964/Legal-LPrim-CE-Sch1P1Chpt1-to-99-Schedule-No-1-Part-1-Chapters-1-to-99.pdf

 

image.png.4add910316fd06587ff7289e30080522.png

Posted
1 hour ago, Dexter-morgan said:

I was looking at purchasing a gravel bike from Lauf - where are they from and what would the duty be on a full bike?

My best understanding follows but any shipment could be treated differently:

 

Made in Iceland but shipped from the US dealer.

1. 15% Duty on 100% of the declared value (duties are based on the country of origin and not where ordered from)

2. 15% VAT on 110% of the declared value (so effectively 16.5% VAT)

3. Shipping fees

4. Local handling Fees

 

AFAIK, Lauf do NOT ship frames outside of the US/UK/Can.

*Please provide an update if you do purchase one, as I have been staring at their website for wayyyy too long.

Posted
3 minutes ago, nonky said:

ty on 100% of the declared

 

2 hours ago, Dexter-morgan said:

I was looking at purchasing a gravel bike from Lauf - where are they from and what would the duty be on a full bike?

I worked on the assumption that Iceland is NOT part of the EU-SA FTA (free trade agreement).

However, it turns out that the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), which includes Iceland, signed a FTA with SACU in 2006. The products involved in the FTA include: "Industrial goods (including fish and other marine products) and processed agricultural products. Basic agricultural products are covered by bilateral agreements with individual EFTA States".

For peace if mind, i included the 15% duty in my calcs.. .but i could be wrong. 

Alternatively, i could be correct but a customs official interprets the Lauf as originating in the US.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
Settings My Forum Content My Followed Content Forum Settings Ad Messages My Ads My Favourites My Saved Alerts My Pay Deals Help Logout