According to www.logisticsmanager.com, the European Union has eliminated the customs duty exemption for low-value parcels valued under €150 (approximately £130), replacing it with a uniform €3 (c. £2.60) customs charge per item.
New Flat-Rate Duty Regime
The EU’s decision applies specifically to Business-to-Consumer (B2C) parcels entering the bloc from outside the EU and takes effect immediately. Under the revised framework, the €3 fee is levied per customs declaration line—not per physical unit—meaning multiple identical items on one declaration incur only one charge. The measure targets distance sales imports and explicitly includes shipments processed under the Import One-Stop Shop (IOSS) mechanism. The EU also introduced new Product Identifier requirements to strengthen traceability and enforcement, reinforcing customs controls across digital trade lanes.
Rationale and Temporary Timeline
The EU justified the policy shift by citing advances in digital customs infrastructure. As stated in the official announcement,
“Due to the digitalised customs environment where electronic data are available for all imported goods regardless of their value, it is no longer justified to maintain the customs duty relief for low-value consignments.”
This exemption had originally been introduced to reduce administrative overhead for customs authorities, businesses, and private individuals—but the EU now asserts it distorts competition by privileging certain cross-border e-commerce flows. Crucially, the €3 flat fee is not permanent: it is scheduled to remain in force only until 1 July 2028, pending full operational launch of the EU Customs Data Hub and broader customs modernisation reforms.
Anti-Abuse Safeguards and Enforcement
To prevent circumvention, the regulation includes explicit anti-abuse provisions. These prohibit operators from artificially fragmenting shipments, reclassifying goods, or restructuring transactions solely to avoid the €3 charge. Customs authorities will assess compliance based on transaction substance—not just form—and may aggregate related consignments for duty calculation where evidence of avoidance exists. The rules apply uniformly across all EU member states, with no national opt-outs permitted. Enforcement will be coordinated through the EU’s newly mandated Digital Customs Platform, which began phased rollout in Q3 2025.
Impact on E-Commerce and Logistics Providers
For international e-commerce sellers—particularly those based in the US, China, and Southeast Asia—the change increases landed cost predictability but reduces margin flexibility on sub-€150 items. Third-party logistics providers and postal operators must now integrate the €3 fee into automated customs clearance workflows, including real-time IOSS validation and product identifier mapping. Early industry feedback indicates that carriers such as DHL, UPS, and national postal services have begun updating API integrations ahead of the 2026 implementation window. According to logistics practitioners, the biggest near-term challenge lies in reconciling the per-declaration billing model with high-volume micro-parcel flows—especially for fashion and electronics retailers shipping single-item orders at scale.
Source: logisticsmanager.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










