As a matter of interest, when a UK manufacturer does not ship overseas duty free does the duty become pure profit on top of whatever Mark up they have on the item? Also, does the material the jacket is made of make any differance at the UK end when it comes to taxes charged?
Regards
Garry
In any case, if you have the paperwork and proof of payment and you are from outside the EU, then you should be able to get the VAT back later by applying to the appropriate authority. Who that is, I have no idea.GHT said:For what it's worth, VAT should not be charged to countries outside the EU. It's usually charged to due ignorance on the part of the vendor who might be worried that he could fall foul of the taxman.
There is a desk at Heathrow where non-EU tourists can queue up with their shopping receipts to claim back the VAT on their UK purchases. Usually seems to be mostly Chinese tourists queued outside (though that may be just a coincidence based on the vast majority of my long haul flights being to and from Beijing, via the terminal where all the Chinese traffic goes). If you plan to do that, well worth allowing an extra couple of hours at the airport.
Tax at point of entry will vary from state to state. In the UK, we pay no import taxes at all for any item which is sourced within the EU. Anything bought from outside that however, is a very different story. Over the minimum threshhold (which last I looked was still as low as GBP16 for mail order), you end up paying roughly 25% of the total declared value including what it cost to ship to the UK. Of course all import taxes are designed to protect the local economy, though it's rather frustrating nonetheless as 99% of the time the reason one orders from abroad is down to the lack of an equivalent item being available locally.