• Competitor rules

    Please remember that any mention of competitors, hinting at competitors or offering to provide details of competitors will result in an account suspension. The full rules can be found under the 'Terms and Rules' link in the bottom right corner of your screen. Just don't mention competitors in any way, shape or form and you'll be OK.

Buying from the States

Soldato
Joined
21 Oct 2002
Posts
4,278
trojan698 said:
If it's marked as a gift, they cant enforce import taxes.
Firstly, these guys arent daft...they know the value of these things. Secondly, if its insured (as my opty 165 was) they will apply tax according to the insured amount.
 
Soldato
OP
Joined
27 Sep 2004
Posts
13,305
Location
South Yorkshire
matt100 said:
bythe way.. there won't be a warranty on it unless you return it in the states..

Cant you send it back to AMD directly?

From the site i am looking at

AMD Athlon 64 X2 4600+ Manchester 2000MHz HT 2 x 512KB L2 Cache Socket 939 Dual Core Processor - Retail

** This item is warranted through the product manufacturer only.
In Stock
 
Last edited:
Associate
Joined
28 Jun 2005
Posts
134
Location
Hell On Earth
I'm not sure about the UK, but with Ireland, I've ordered numerous things in from the US. Getting the sender to mark them as a gift or replacment allows it to bypass the customs tax.

I always ask if they'll mark it gift/replacement, ever since ordering a box set dvd worth €30, and getting charged €27 import duty! :eek:
 
Soldato
Joined
31 Jul 2004
Posts
13,531
Location
Surrey
cymatty said:
Cant you send it back to AMD directly?

only in the states, companies exist as legal entities on different continents, if you bought it from Germany for example you would have some leg to stand on because there are european laws governing that sort of thing but not for anything bought in the states.

For that it'll have to go back to the states because AMD europe won't want anything to do with it.
 
Soldato
Joined
28 Dec 2003
Posts
16,076
Lewcifer said:
I'm not sure about the UK, but with Ireland, I've ordered numerous things in from the US. Getting the sender to mark them as a gift or replacment allows it to bypass the customs tax.
You can do this but there are two problems.

Firstly customs may decide you're lying about it being a gift and charge you anyway, in which case they can make up whatever value they like for it which may end up being more than it's actually worth.

Unless the sender is very friendly with their local post office or courier, it won't be possible to mark an expensive item as a gift for customs purposes and still have it insured for the real value, as the discrepancy will be obvious. If you want the sender to mark your £200 processor as a gift to escape customs charges then fine but be aware that you may not have any insurance on it and if it goes missing you're screwed.
 
Associate
Joined
15 Aug 2005
Posts
715
aything over £18 is subject to tax (rules changed 2 years ago)
it doesn't matter if its 2nd hand or new or gift it still taxable

also if your item gets stopped at customs, parcelforce then take it
your local depot you have to enter credit card details over phone to pay taxaman and parecelforce also charge you for taking it to your local depot
then you have to pay parcelforce again to deliver to your door.

so beware buying from non E.U you would have to use Pre-payment of import VAT at customs this will allow your item be delivered to your door to miss out parcelforce double delivery charge.
 
Associate
Joined
28 Jun 2005
Posts
134
Location
Hell On Earth
Again, this is Ireland (way more backwards than Britain :p ), I've never actually ordered any computer parts from the states, but I've ordered numerous BMX parts. Got a frame and wheels in without import duty because the company I was buying from knew the deal and marked it as a replacement.
Nice chaps at Empire. :D
 
Permabanned
Joined
11 Mar 2004
Posts
5,884
cymatty said:
After AMD drops its prices soon, my grandma will be going to America to visit her friend. I am currently looking at getting a X2 4600 shipped to her house for when my grandma arrives, at this point I think they will be around the £160 mark. Are CPU prices much different in the states than over here?

What are the potential drawbacks of buying a CPU from the states? If it breaks, what will the return policy be?

Oh... I'm not worried about customs (I know they don't like 'funny looking chips') as I doubt they'll stop an 80 year old woman :D


My AMD 3000+ venice came from the USA. :) damn site cheaper than here too. for the cheapest places to buy products from in America use www.pricewatch.com (no need to remove this link mods, its american stores that only sell to american based customers)

to convert dollars to pounds or vice versa use www.convertit.com

p.s. you wont get an X2 4600 even after the price reductions, for £160. they are currently £287 in America, you can expect them to drop to around £200/£220.
 
Last edited:
Soldato
OP
Joined
27 Sep 2004
Posts
13,305
Location
South Yorkshire
locutus12 said:
p.s. you wont get an X2 4600 even after the price reductions, for £160. they are currently £287 in America, you can expect them to drop to around £200/£220.

The prices in the link i posted from amd show that the price will drop to $300 which is around £170-180. The current prices in the states are very similar to amd's rrp. :)
 
Associate
Joined
15 Sep 2005
Posts
837
Any item may get through without having VAT/duty added in the post ... but technically if VAT/duty is payable you as the receiver are, I believe, liable to ensure that that it is paid so technically I think you are committing a criminal offence by not paying it :)

Also, another thing to note is that depending on which delivery company is used you may find a hefty "handling fee" added for processing the customs/duty (I seem to recall reading that ParcelForce charge something like £10-15 to cover the "costs of handling customs declarations and payments)
 
Associate
Joined
15 Sep 2005
Posts
837
aha, failed to notice that it was being delivered in US and you were bringing it back to UK.

Firstly, in US it will be best to order "out of state" (i.e. from retailer in different state from delivery) as that way avoids sales tax being added (though again officially people buying this way are often meant to send the tax in themselves - Calif has a section in its income tax form where your meant to declare outof state purchases IIRC + they very definitely have been going after people buying cigarettes out of state to reclaim tobacco duty!)

Then you just need to walk calmly through the green customs lane and hope you don't get stopped by an overzealous customs person!
 
Back
Top Bottom