Morning,
I'm trying to ship a vintage car part to the USA from Canada. I'd like to use the tariff code that'd be best for the buyer, but not break any rules. From my research I think I'm supposed to use 8708, but I'm at a lost at what I should choose for the next two digits. The part is a 63 power window harness if that matters, but I'm more interested in the code for USA made vintage car parts. Anybody figure this out themselves? Any input is greatly appreciated, Michael.
A few years ago I shipped some arm rests to a guy in I think Florida, using Canada Post, and I thought I used a 9966.xx (or 99.66.xx) code. Canada tariff code list has that for cars and parts of cars that are 25+ years old. I look at that now, and see that the US code list does not have a 9966 section.
But there's more going on here. And it's probably the reason why Canada Post and their financial problems have come into play so quickly recently in Canada.
The US tariffs on Canada don't apply to items covered under USMCA (or CUSMA) aka NAFTA. But here's the kicker:
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CUSMA-originating goods from Canada and Mexico are not exempt from IEEPA tariffs for postal shipments,” Canada Post spokesperson Lisa Liu said in a statement, referring to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, the law Trump has cited to justify most of his tariffs.
Liu pointed to Section 3 of Trump’s July 30
order, which lays out separate rules for parcels shipped to the U.S. through the international postal network. Unlike those sent through private couriers, postal shipments from Canada face either a 35 per cent tariff on the value of the package, or, for the next six months, a flat fee of US$200 per item. (A
fact sheet released with the order states gifts worth less than US$100 can still cross the border duty-free, no matter the shipping method.)
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for information about why the international postal network was singled out.
However, people with knowledge of cross-border trade say the move puts Canada Post at a serious disadvantage, as merchants switch to other shipping and delivery options. The language in the order for private couriers says only that those shipments face all “applicable” duties, meaning the carve-out for USMCA-compliant goods still applies.
The postal service 'will have no commercial business’ to U.S. as small businesses scramble for alternatives, customs expert warns
thelogic.co
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In my experience, using the postal system to ship non-duty, non-taxable small items (ie 1 cubic foot box) to the US was convienent, easy, reliable and relatively inexpensive. The US buyer had paid me through paypal, and since I semi-regularly used paypay to buy things, I was able to keep that money within my paypal account and didn't need to actually cash it in. Many other person-to-person payment systems that operate in the US don't operate across the border to Canada
If your buyer can pay you in advance, you might consider sending it as a gift using the postal system. I don't know if you still need to fill in a tariff code in that case. Otherwise you're looking at probably Fedex.
Regarding the exact HS code, your best starting point is here:
hts.usitc.gov
I poked around a little, and it seems that for items that have some age associated with them (ie "years" or "exceeding" or "antique" is somehow part of the description) the US codes don't recognize any age for anything under 100 years. Canada HS codes do have such codes, including for cars and parts, with ages starting at 25 years.