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Archive for March, 2012

US Customs creates difficulties for courier packages from Spain.

Thursday, March 22nd, 2012

Our Citibox office in Javea, Alicante sent a parcel to the USA containing porcelain plates.  It got stopped in US Customs and the recipient was asked to fill out a US Customs form 5106, even though Citibox had charged any import duty to our own account.  She refused to do so which meant that the china came all the way back to Spain where it got stuck in Spanish Customs who wanted import tax on a package worth €3,000 from the USA.

Naturally, Citibox sorted the problem out and the package was returned to the USA without clearing Spanish Customs and passed through US Customs without difficulty to a recipient who was prepared to give her US tax# or US ID.

All of this was a great waste of time and money so I decided that the next shipment I would do myself to ensure that all the paperwork was completed correctly.  Unfortunately, despite my best efforts, this shipment to the USA, worth €4,000 is stuck in customs.  Although I had to answer a number of stupid questions such as the name and address of the factory which I had already been careful to put on the invoice they insist on the recipient filling out a Form 5106.  FedEx Customs Department in the USA had this to say:

I am sorry the importer of record needs to complete this form if there is someone else who is willing to be the importer of record – that has a US federal Tax ID # (ss#) Then the invoice can be changed to accommodate for that and they can complete the form but the form is needed to make entry into the US. There is no other way around this.

So that seems pretty final, we are trying to contact the recipient in California to ask her to complete the form.  The porcelain is a wedding present imported from France and sent from Spain to the USA so it seems to me pretty mean that customs should stop it.  And that has got me to thinking why?

Normally, shipments from Spain to the USA pass through Customs with no problems.  The FedEx website tells me that this Harmonised Tariff Number incurs no duty on import.  So it must be to do with the value of the contents and I can only conclude that US Customs http://www.cbp.gov/ is clamping down on money laundering or tax evasion.  I will try and find out the value that triggers the need to complete the form and will let you know.

 

A few of the strange shipments that Citibox sends by international courier from Spain in a typical week.

Friday, March 16th, 2012

Just this week: A lady’s mother’s ashes; two large boxes of Boric Acid; 210 kg of shoes exported to England; a box of micro-switches sent from Istanbul, Turkey to Sharjah, UAE (never again, it took 15 phone calls to Turkey and I do not exaggerate); one lady imported from the UK an ironing board; a consignment of Jerusalem artichokes sent from Britain; a 34 piece set of porcelain sent as a wedding gift to the USA.

Obviously, this is on top of the normal parcels and urgent letters that we send from Spain on a daily basis.  We have a new customer sending organic olive oil, another sending organic T-shirts for whom we pay the carbon neutral option of UPS http://www.carbonneutral.com/page/ups which keeps his customers happy in the thought that the courier delivery from Spain to the USA does not increase global warming.

Amazon Kindle returns and why you should not use Yodel courier from Spain to the UK

Monday, March 12th, 2012

We are a courier company so I feel entitled to comment on other courier companies.

Recently we have had a spate of returns to Amazon, both in the UK and the USA.  I am not exactly surprised, two of my keyboard Kindles have broken and I am waiting for the third to arrive.  Full marks to Amazon they have been replaced free of charge.

The USA returns are because the Kindle costs less there so people take advantage of a bargain but obviously when we FedEx it back as a return it costs more to return it than to Spain or the UK.  So, as my wife was returning to the UK anyway for a “girls’ weekend” I asked her to take back my non-working Kindle and return it to Amazon which is a free service.

The trouble is that Amazon use a courier company called Yodel which have a premium rate telephone number and don’t actually collect.  By the time I had spent 9 minutes calling them from Spain today to find out why they didn’t collect (no excuse but they did say sorry, however they don’t answer their email) I could have FedExed my Kindle to Amazon returns department for less money that the telephone call.

Lesson learned.  If you want to send something to the UK from Spain Citibox is your cheapest method and you know it will be collected and will arrive.

International Courier from and to Spain and how to deal with problems

Monday, March 5th, 2012

There are so many links in the transport chain when you send or receive a parcel to and from Spain and abroad so let’s study the process of urgent letters and economy packet services to and from Spain, why most go right and a tiny proportion go wrong.

1) Paperwork. All Citibox customers have to have their paperwork printed and ready for collection before the messenger collects. Without this parcels can go by the wrong parcel service (economy instead of priority or vice-versa), the packages can get lost because they no longer contain the correct barcode and delivery address details and we cannot track them under the original tracking number. Please always print what we send you, we are experts in knowing just what it takes to get your shipment through.
2) Collection. Don’t misunderstand me, 99% of collections go well but there are three reasons why a collection might go wrong. (a) Wrong address or difficult to you’re your premises without further information (b) No one there when the van arrives (c) Courier is being taken many km off route for a single collection and decides to invent either (a) or (b).
3) Transit. Even short-haul packages go through several hubs until they reach their destination. A parcel from Marbella, Spain to Central England, UK will be collected by a small van and driven to Málaga where it will be sorted and put on a plane to Madrid. In Madrid the package will be packed into an airline container destined for the UK and flown to the FedEx European hub in Paris. This container, maybe containing your urgent letter from Spain will then be flown to Stansted in England before being transferred to a flight to Birmingham. From Birmingham it will be distributed to the local FedEx UK International depot and loaded onto a van for delivery the same day. We are talking about 24 hour delivery with all these transfers from vans to aircraft to conveyor belts through X-Ray machines which look for dangerous contents like aerosols; a fully automated process until it gets back to human hands.
4) Customs. While packages are in Customs they are out of our control and with a government agency. Spanish Customs scrutinise parcels going out of Spain as well as incoming parcels to Spain trying to stop the courier export of prohibited goods, the import of medicines and to levy duty on parcels arriving in Spain. UK Customs look for any illegal goods such as alcohol, cigarettes or drugs.
5) What happens to a lost parcel? Most parcels are located and delivered, even if they are late, in which case the transit cost is refunded. Some packages are lost or damaged and then Citibox submits a claim on behalf of you, our customer, and sees it through to payment from FedEx direct to your bank. Loss or damage of a UPS or FedEx courier package from Spain is such a rare event that we are able to contact managers in all countries to fast-track the claim process.
6) Delivery. Like “2) Collection” above, this is where human error can creep in for the reasons a, b & c already stated. The individual van driver is the one who decides how professional the service is going to be but we have to take account of human nature. Does he have a hangover; has he rowed with his wife; does he need to finish early to collect his children from school? Each person has different priorities and these can change daily. Most drivers are really professional but we get ones who let down the standards of their profession and we report these to their managers. The chain is only as good as its weakest link and this is where it is.

The main thing is that if you send your package, parcel or suitcase or letter through Citibox Spain you have a whole back-up team ready to spring into action the moment there is a problem and work just for you to ensure that the package gets through or you get the insurance payout. Please don’t be alarmed, the chances of you losing a parcel are negligible, far less than the postal services but, if it happens, you are better off with Citibox courier services.

 

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