...any other tips? Nah, it ain't hard. I now write "pocket knife" or "camp knife" in the customs description. If you are sending parts, I'd label them "tool repair parts". I once had a seller ship me a knife from Canada, he labelled it "bicycle parts". I think that's a bad idea. If a package gets scanned (and they all seem to now) and the scan doesn't match the description, that might get a customs agent curious enough to open the parcel. So I try to be accurate, but not interesting. I wouldn't label a parcel "COOLEST ever pocket knife. RARE, RARE, RARE!" But "Pocket knife" should fly through. [/list]
in my country you cannot ship anything with a battery in it (Consoles, Lasers, Flashlights...), only the thing without power source, either ship out or in of the country.if they catch a battery of any kind through the scan they confiscate the package and even destroy (dispose of) it if you're unlucky I don't know if that applies here too
Se pone en su conocimiento que realizado control de escaner, se detecta un paquete que contiene un machete tipo militar, dicho paquete debe ser devuelto al remitente, al no poder circular por correo postal al estar prohibida su circulación. RD. 137/1993.Lo que me han dicho en correo que las tiendas si que pueden enviar por correo estos productos cuando son de origen comercial de un establecimiento pero particulares no.
Quote from: ThePeacent on February 18, 2018, 06:47:23 PMin my country you cannot ship anything with a battery in it (Consoles, Lasers, Flashlights...), only the thing without power source, either ship out or in of the country.if they catch a battery of any kind through the scan they confiscate the package and even destroy (dispose of) it if you're unlucky I don't know if that applies here too In Spain I was told that Weapons Regulations forbides sending knives by MAIL (CORREOS), except for cutlery shops. Private people can not send knives (Not apply for folding knives, only fixed blades).COURIER COMPANIES YES are authorized to send knives neverthless
Anything I need to watch out for, such as:is it legal to do so? Yes. No issues sending MT's or Knives to the USA.any customs regs I need to abide by? Up to which value is a tool likely to fly under the radar? Your shipping agent will have the appropriate customs forms. I don't know about the specifics. Gifts less than $100 are generally not charged any duties. Alcohol & tobacco get special duties. Obviously organic food stuffs are subject to restrictions, I wouldn't send any food stuffs with other durable goods. any packing tips: big box or rather bubble wrap in an envelope? If something is slim, I regularly send it in a bubble envelope. Bigger stuff I put in some kind of packaging and a box. But I've sent small knives through the mail in a padded envelope without a problem. Sometimes adding a little extra wrapping to prevent damage to the item or the envelope. any specific formatting of the address, or things that must, should, or definitely should not be written on the package? US addresses follow a systematic format:First name Last Name (John Doe)P.O. Box number (PO box 100) [if applicable, not everyone has a PO box]Street/House Address (100 Main Street) then Apartment Number (Apt 10 or Unit 2) [if applicable]City/Town (Happyville), State (Alaska or AK)Zip code/postal code (01001)USADo NOT write "Drugs" "Bomb" or "Biohazard" on the outside. That would be bad. Do put your return address on the parcel. any other tips? Nah, it ain't hard. I now write "pocket knife" or "camp knife" in the customs description. If you are sending parts, I'd label them "tool repair parts". I once had a seller ship me a knife from Canada, he labelled it "bicycle parts". I think that's a bad idea. If a package gets scanned (and they all seem to now) and the scan doesn't match the description, that might get a customs agent curious enough to open the parcel. So I try to be accurate, but not interesting. I wouldn't label a parcel "COOLEST ever pocket knife. RARE, RARE, RARE!" But "Pocket knife" should fly through. [/list]