BadBong wrote:WASP mentioned the duty that we have to pay... but I assume that's on the monetary value of a 'single item' right? (Can someone explain how it works?)
If we can get 5 kits, we can easily seperate it into smaller boxes before it's shipped and the only thing that will be over $1000 will be the mp62.
It's not hard to work out, and
there are examples on the customs websiteYou take the value of the "goods" (in AUD) and multiply by 0.05 - that's the duty.
Then you add up the value of the goods, plus the cost of shipping, plus the duty - and multiply the total by 0.10 - that's the GST. Add the GST to the total (or multiply by 1.10 instead of 0.10) and you get the total price, landed.
The AUD$1000 limit applies to the total value of the goods, not individual items. The $1000 limit does not include shipping, so if you buy something worth $950 that costs $200 to ship you will not get charged duty or GST.
If you are going to break it up into multiple shipments to try and stay under $1000, be aware that unless you have them shipped to different locations, Customs will see multiple shipments from the same sender to the same receiver, and add the value of them together.
Also, with the fluctuating Aussie dollar, be aware that customs uses the exchange rate of the day the packages shipped, not the day you paid for it. This may have worked in my favour recently, as my items shipped 3 weeks after I paid for them, and in the meantime the dollar went up in value.
If I'd known it was going to do that I would have asked Goodwin to wait a few weeks before charging my credit card, but that's the thing with Forex and the stock market - it could have gone either way. You win some, you lose some
